Timely quotes

April 9, 2003 at 6:22 pm
Contributed by:

Folks,

 

Having
collected a fair number of interesting quotes from hither and yon lately, I
thought I’d send some around.

 

May I
suggest that you start with these first, from the March issue of The Sun, my
longtime favorite magazine.
Sure, I’ll give them a plug, I’ve been a loyal
subscriber for about 15 years now.

http://www.thesunmagazine.org/327_Beams.pdf 
(Sorry, it’s a PDF file)

 


“You know the world is going crazy when
the best rapper is a white
guy,
the best golfer is a black guy,
the tallest guy in the NBA is
Chinese,
the Swiss hold the America’s Cup,
France is accusing the U.S. of
arrogance,
Germany doesn’t want to go to war,
and the three most powerful
men in America
are named ‘Bush’, ‘Dick’, and ‘Colon’”
- Chris
Rock



“To announce that there must be
no criticism of the president, or that we
are to stand by the president right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the
American public.”
– Teddy Roosevelt


“I know two types of law because I know
two types of men, those who are with us
and those who are against us.” – Hermann Goering, 1936


“You are either with us or against us.”
- George W. Bush, November 2001


“Either you are with us, or you are
with the terrorists.” – George W. Bush,
September 2001


“If our nation is ever taken over, it
will be taken over from within.” -President James Madison


“There’s
a better form of security: reconnect with the rest of the world, don’t shut it
out; stop making enemies and start making friends. Perhaps it’s asking a lot to
expect America to act differently from all the other empires in history, but
wasn’t that the original idea?”
–Brian Eno


“An evil exists that threatens every
man, woman and child of this great nation, We must take steps to ensure our
domestic security and protect our homeland.” –Adoph Hitler, writing
about creation of the Gestapo in Nazi Germany.


“The world is a dangerous place to
live; not because of the people who are
evil, but because of the people who don’t
do anything about it.Albert
Einstein


“PATRIOTISM IS THE LAST REFUGE OF THE
SCOUNDREL” Samuel Johnson


“Just a 2.7-mpg gain in the fuel
economy of this country’s light-vehicle fleet could displace Persian Gulf
imports entirely” Amory B.
Lovins


Reasonable people adapt themselves to
the world. Unreasonable people attempt to adapt the world to themselves. All
progress, therefore, depends on unreasonable people.–George Bernard Shaw


“When the rich wage war, it’s the poor
who die.”Jean-Paul Sartre


A hundred times every day I remind
myself that my inner and outer life
depends on the labors of other men, living and dead, and that I must exert myself in order to give
in the same measure as I have received and
am still receiving.Albert
Einstein


“Whoever undertakes to set himself up
as judge
       in the field of truth and
knowledge
            is
shipwrecked by the laughter of the Gods.”
Einstein


“Think for yourselves and do not
uncritically accept what you are told, and
do what you can to make the world a better place, particularly for those
who suffer and are oppressed.”Noam Chomsky


A very famous quote, often attributed to Jefferson is:


    “Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty.”

Indeed, this is a sentiment that is consonant with Jefferson’s
writings, and there are several genuine quotes that are similar to it. But
Jefferson did not write it. Bartlett’s “Familiar Quotations” credits it to John
Philpot Curran, a contemporary of Jefferson. Bartlett’s says it is “commonly
quoted” as stated above. However, the original version is, in my opinion, much
more interesting:


    “It is the common fate of the indolent to see their rights become
    a prey to the active. The condition upon which God hath given liberty to man
    is eternal vigilance; which condition if he break, servitude is at once the
    consequence of his crime and the punishment of his guilt.”

Jefferson wrote the following, expressing approximately the same sentiments:


    “Lethargy [is] the forerunner of death to the public liberty.” –Thomas
    Jefferson to William Stephens Smith, 1787.

    “We, I hope, shall adhere to our republican government and keep it to its
    original principles by narrowly watching it.” –Thomas Jefferson to ——,
    March 18, 1793. ME 9:45

    “I do most anxiously wish to see the highest degrees of education given to
    the higher degrees of genius and to all degrees of it, so much as may enable
    them to read and understand what is going on in the world and to keep their
    part of it going on right; for nothing can keep it right but their own
    vigilant and distrustful superintendence.” –Thomas Jefferson to Mann Page,
    1795. ME 9:306


Thus, it is easy to see how the quote in question might be attributed to
Jefferson. (From http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/7970/jefpco13.htm)


–C



Dems call Halliburton probe re: defense contracts – Apr. 9, 2003

April 9, 2003 at 12:18 am
Contributed by:

Folks,


Here’s an interesting development. Have the Democrats finally grown a spine?


“Democratic members [in] Congress have complained since before the war
started not only about questionable contracts, but about the fact that that
companies in the running to rebuild Iraq had more information on the
administration’s plans than they did.”

http://edition.cnn.com/2003/BUSINESS/04/09/sprj.irq.halliburton/

Rubber Bullets, Wooden Dowels Fired on War Protesters in Oakland

April 8, 2003 at 9:32 pm
Contributed by:

Folks,


In case you happened to miss this report outside of the Bay Area, here are a couple of updates on protests that happened at the docks in Oakland yesterday. It also has a brief mention of yesterday’s protest in New York against the Carlyle Group.


“I have been to many protests over the years, and I have never seen police resort to shooting people because they didn’t like where they were standing,” said Scott Fleming, 29, a lawyer hit several times in the back.


http://msnbc.com/news/895056_asp.htm?0cv=CB10


http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&ncid=578&e=2&cid=578&u=/nm/20030407/ts_nm/iraq_protests_usa_dc


Lovely.


Anybody laying bets on the next Kent State incident, or a replay of the Chicago riots? Doesn’t seem far behind.


–C

Ex-CIA director Woolsey: U.S. faces \’World War IV\’

April 8, 2003 at 9:23 pm
Contributed by:

Folks, 

 

One may well expect the CIA to lead the
charge when it comes to fear-mongering, and they’ve been trotting out
a whole host of “ex”-CIA guys on TV to make sure we’re all afraid of
the right things.


It will be America’s backing of democratic movements throughout the Middle
East that will bring about this sense of unease, he said.


“Our response should be, ‘good!’” Woolsey said.


Uh-huh! Good to see Bill Bennett’s hat back in the
ring. This whole outfit never really went away after Reagan, did they?

 

http://www.cnn.com/2003/US/04/03/sprj.irq.woolsey.world.war/index.html  

Ex-CIA director: U.S. faces ‘World War IV’

From Charles Feldman and Stan Wilson
CNN

Thursday, April 3, 2003 Posted: 2202 GMT ( 6:02 AM
HKT)






image
Former CIA Director James
Woolsey


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LOS ANGELES, California (CNN) – Former CIA Director James Woolsey said Wednesday the
United States is engaged in World War IV, and that it could continue for
years.


In the address to a group of college students, Woolsey described the Cold War
as the third world war and said “This fourth world war, I think, will last
considerably longer than either World Wars I or II did for us. Hopefully not the
full four-plus decades of the Cold War.”


Woolsey has been named in news reports as a possible candidate for a key
position in the reconstruction of a postwar Iraq.


He said the new war is actually against three enemies: the religious rulers
of Iran, the “fascists” of Iraq and Syria, and Islamic extremists like al Qaeda.


Woolsey told the audience of about 300, most of whom are students at the
University of California at Los Angeles, that all three enemies have waged war
against the United States for several years but the United States has just
“finally noticed.”


“As we move toward a new Middle East,” Woolsey said, “over the years and, I
think, over the decades to come … we will make a lot of people very nervous.”


It will be America’s backing of democratic movements throughout the Middle
East that will bring about this sense of unease, he said.


“Our response should be, ‘good!’” Woolsey said.


Singling out Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and the leaders of Saudi
Arabia, he said, “We want you nervous. We want you to realize now, for the
fourth time in a hundred years, this country and its allies are on the march and
that we are on the side of those whom you — the Mubaraks, the Saudi Royal
family — most fear: We’re on the side of your own people.”


Woolsey, who served as CIA director under President Bill Clinton, was taking
part in a “teach-in” at UCLA, a series of such forums at universities across the
nation.


A group calling itself “Americans for Victory Over Terrorism” sponsors the
teach-ins, and the Bruin Republicans, UCLA’s campus Republicans organization,
co-sponsored Wednesday night’s event.


The group was founded by former Education Secretary William Bennett, who took
part in Wednesday’s event along with Paul Bremer, a U.S. ambassador during the
Reagan administration and the former chairman of the National Commission on
Terrorism.  

Hunter S. Thompson: Fear and a \"nationwide nervous breakdown\"

April 8, 2003 at 9:23 pm
Contributed by:

Folks,

 

More interesting words from Hunter S.
Thompson and fear-mongering by the Bush administration. Interesting
stuff!

 

–C


 
 



News



The Salon
Interview
- – - – - – - – - – - -


Hunter
S. Thompson
The godfather of gonzo says 9/11 caused a “nationwide nervous breakdown”
– and let the Bush crowd loot the country and savage American
democracy.


- – - – - –
- – - – - -
By John
Glassie


printe-mail


Feb. 3, 2003
 |  He calls himself “an elderly dope
fiend living out in the wilderness,” but Hunter S.
Thompson
will also be found this week on the New York Times bestseller list
with a new memoir, “Kingdom of Fear: Loathsome Secrets of a Star-Crossed Child
in the Final Days of the American Century.”


Listening to his ragged voice, there is some sense that Thompson, now 65, has
reined in his outlaw ways, gotten a little softer, perhaps a little more
gracious now that he’s reached retirement age. “I’ve found you can deal with the
system a lot easier if you use their rules,” he says. “I talk to a lot of
lawyers.”


But do not be deceived. In “Kingdom of Fear” and in a telephone interview
with Salon from his compound in Aspen, Colo., Thompson did what he’s always
done: speak the truth about American society as he sees it, without worrying
much about decorum. “Who does vote for these dishonest shitheads?” he
writes, referring to the people currently occupying the White House. “They are
the racists and hate mongers among us — they are the Ku Klux Klan. I piss down
the throats of these Nazis.”


That’s his enduring attitude in this new age of darkness: a lot more loathing
than fear.


The godfather of gonzo believes America has suffered a “nationwide nervous
breakdown” since 9/11, and as a result is compromising civil liberties for what
he calls “the illusion of security.” The compromise, he says, is “a disaster of
unthinkable proportions” and “part of the downward spiral of dumbness” he
believes is plaguing the country.


While the country’s spinning out of control, Thompson says his own lifestyle
has been a model of consistency. He still does whatever the hell he wants. In
fact, his new book was supposed to be a “definitive memoir of his life,”
a long look back by the man who rode with the Hell’s Angels, who experienced the
riots at the 1968 Democratic Convention, and who has smoked more cigarettes,
driven more fast cars, fired more weapons and done more drugs than most living
people, let alone most living authors. But the book is much more than memoir.


Thompson has long been an outspoken and vigorous champion of civil liberties,
at least since a well-publicized 1990 case in which he was charged with sexual
and physical assault and possession of illegal drugs — charges that were
ultimately dropped due to an illegal search and seizure.


Of course, the writer has distrusted power all his life, and it may come as
no surprise that he now believes the administration is “manufacturing” the Iraqi
threat for its own political gain and the economic gain of the “oligarchy”
(read: the military-industrial complex).


Perhaps Thompson’s most disturbing charge is aimed at the American people —
only half of whom exercise their right to vote. “The oligarchy doesn’t need an
educated public. And maybe the nation does prefer tyranny,” he says. “I think
that’s what worries me.”


In the end, however, Thompson is not and has never been that easy to
pigeonhole. He’s friends with Pat Buchanan and has a lifetime membership in the
National Rifle Association. In his own mind, if not in others’, he is “one of
the most patriotic people I’ve ever encountered in America.”


Your new book, “Kingdom of Fear,” is being called a definitive memoir —
although almost all of your books seem to be autobiographical in one way or
another. What’s the difference between the written accounts — of drug use,
run-ins with the law, sex, fast cars, guns and explosives — and real-life
events?


I don’t really see any difference. Telling the truth is the easiest way; it
saves a lot of time. I’ve found that the truth is weirder than any fiction I’ve
seen. There was a girl that worked for me a long time ago, who graduated third
in her class from Georgetown Law School, and was from some kind of uptown family
in Chicago, and instead of going to work for some big-time firm, she came to
Aspen and ends up working for me out here in the wilderness. A year or so later
her mother or father were coming out to visit. I’ve had some understandable
issues with parents — really all my life. And I’d be worried about my daughter,
too, if she’d run off with some widely known infamous monster. And so I asked
her — just so I could get braced for this situation, meeting the parents and
having them come to the house: “Given what you know about me and what you hear
about me, which is worse?” She finally came out and said there was no question
in her mind that the reality was heavier and crazier and more dangerous. Having
to deal with the reality is no doubt a little more traumatic.


Indeed, your author blurb says you live in “a fortified compound near
Aspen, Colorado.” In what sense is it fortified and why does it need to be?


Actually, I live in an extremely pastoral setting in an old log house. It’s a
farm really. I moved here 30 years ago. I think the only fortification might be
my reputation. If people believe they’re going to be shot, they might stay away.


Yes, I understand you’re a gun enthusiast, to put it euphemistically. But
do you support more restrictive gun laws? Do you support a ban on assault
weapons?


I have one or two of those, but I got them before they were illegal. In that
case, if I were sure that any tragedies and mass murders would be prevented, I’d
give up my assault rifle. But I don’t really believe that. Do I have any illegal
weapons? No. I have a .454 magnum revolver, which is huge, and it’s absolutely
legal. One day I was wild-eyed out here with Johnny Depp, and we both ordered
these guns from Freedom, Wyo., and got them the next day through FedEx. Mainly,
I have rifles, pistols, shotguns; I have a lot of those. But everything I have
is top quality; I don’t have any junk weapons. I wouldn’t have any military
weapon around here, except as an artifact of some kind. Given Ashcroft and the
clear blueprint of this administration to make everything illegal and everything
suspicious — how about suspicion of being a terrorist sympathizer? Goddamn,
talk about filling up your concentration camps. But, yeah, my police record is
clean. This is not a fortified compound.


So, just to clarify, how do your views stack up with the NRA’s?


I think I’m still a life member of the NRA. I formed a gun club out here, an
official sporting club, and I got charter from the NRA. That made it legal to
have guns here, to bring guns here, to have ammunition sent here, that sort of
thing. I’ve found you can deal with the system a lot easier if you use their
rules — by understanding their rules, by using their rules against them. I talk
to a lot of lawyers. You know, I consider Pat Buchanan a friend. I don’t agree
with him on many things. Personally, I enjoy him. I just like him. And I learn
from Pat. One of the things I’m most proud of is that I never had anybody
busted, arrested, jailed for my writing about them. I never had any — what’s
that? — collateral damage.


But speaking of rules, you’ve been arrested dozens of times in your life.
Specific incidents aside, what’s common to these run-ins? Where do you stand
vis-à-vis the law?


Goddammit. Yeah, I have. First, there’s a huge difference between being
arrested and being guilty. Second, see, the law changes and I don’t. How I stand
vis-à-vis the law at any given moment depends on the law. The law can change
from state to state, from nation to nation, from city to city. I guess I have to
go by a higher law. How’s that? Yeah, I consider myself a road man for the lords
of karma.


In 1990, you were put on trial for what you call “sex, drugs, dynamite and
violence.” Charges were eventually dropped. Since then, you’ve been outspoken on
Fourth Amendment issues: search and seizure, the right to privacy. I assume
you’ve taken a side in the civil liberties debate that’s come up in the
aftermath of 9/11?


It’s a disaster of unthinkable proportions — part of the downward spiral of
dumbness. Civil liberties are black and white issues. I don’t think people think
far enough to see the ramifications. The PATRIOT Act was a dagger in the heart,
really, of even the concept of a democratic government that is free, equal and
just. There are a lot more concentration camps right now than Guantanamo Bay.
But they’re not marked. Now, every jail, every bush-league cop can run a
concentration camp. It amounts to a military and police takeover, I think.


Well, as some have pointed out, Lincoln suspended habeas corpus during the
Civil War. Is some suspension of civil liberties ever appropriate or justified
in a time of war?


If there’s a visible, obvious threat like Hitler, but in my mind the
administration is using these bogeymen for their own purposes. This military law
is nothing like the Constitution. They’re exploiting the formula here: The
people are afraid of something and you offer a solution, however drastic, and
they go along with it. For a while, yeah. My suspicions are more justified every
day with this manufacturing of dangerous killer villains. The rest of the world
does not perceive, I don’t think, that some tin-horn dictator in the Middle East
is more of a danger to the world than the U.S. is. This country depends on war
as a primary industry. The White House has pumped up the danger factor because
it’s to their advantage. It’s to John Ashcroft’s advantage. There have always
been pros and cons about the righteousness of life in America but this just
seems planned, it seems consistent, and it seems traditional.


What do they get out of it?


They get control of the U.S. economy, their friends get rich. These are not
philosopher-kings we’re talking about. These are politicians. It’s a very sleazy
way of using the system. One of the problems today is that what’s going on today
is not as complex as it seems. The Pentagon just asked for another $14 billion
more in the budget, and it’s already $28 billion. [Defense spending in the 2003
budget rose $19.4 billion, to $364.6 billion]. That’s one sector of the economy
that’s not down the tubes. So, some people are getting rich off of this. It’s
the oligarchy. I believe the Republicans have never thought that democracy was
anything but a tribal myth. The GOP is the party of capital. It’s pretty basic.
And it may have something to do with the deterioration of educational system in
this country. I don’t think Bush has the slightest intention or concern about
educating the public.


Many people would say you’re un-American and unpatriotic.


I think I’m one of the most patriotic people that I’ve ever encountered in
America. I consider myself a bedrock patriot. I participate very actively in
local politics, because my voice might be worthwhile. I participate in a
meaningful way — not by donations, I work at it.


Well, what do you prescribe? What do you advocate?


All the blood is drained out of democracy — it dies — when only half the
population votes. I would use the vote. It would seem to me that people who have
been made afraid, if you don’t like what’s happening, if you don’t want to go to
war, if you don’t want to be broke, well for God’s sake don’t go out and vote
for the very bastards who are putting you there. That’s a pillar of any
democratic future in this country. The party of capital is not interested in
having every black person in Louisiana having access to the Ivy League. They
don’t need an educated public.


So what took place during this past election?


I believe the Republicans have seen what they’ve believed all along, which is
that this democracy stuff is bull, and that people don’t want to be burdened by
political affairs. That people would rather just be taken care of. The oligarchy
doesn’t need an educated public. And maybe the nation does prefer tyranny. I
think that’s what worries me. It goes back to Fourth Amendment issues. How much
do you value your freedom? Would you trade your freedom for some illusion of
security? Freedom is something that dies unless it’s used.


This is coming from someone who’s described himself as “an elderly dope
fiend who lives out in the wilderness” and also as a “drunken screwball.”


A dangerous drunken screwball.


Right. Sorry. So why would anybody listen to you?


I don’t have to apologize for any political judgments I’ve made. The stuff I
wrote in the ’60s and ’70s was astonishingly accurate. I may have been a little
rough on Nixon, but he was rough. You had to do it with him. What you believe
has to be worth something. I’ve never given it a lot of thought: I’ve never
hired people to figure out what I should do about my image. I always work the
same way, and talk the same way, and I’ve been right enough that I stand by my
record.


But is there a sense in which your views are, by definition, going to be
seen as fringe views — views that can just be discarded?


That is a problem and I guess “Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas” might have
colored the way people perceive me. But I haven’t worried that people see me as
“dope fiend,” I’d rather get rid of the “elderly” rather than the “dope fiend.”


What’s the best example of something you were right about?


Christ, the Hell’s Angels certainly. Police agencies regarded that book as a
major primary resource on motorcycle gangs. I started covering presidential
politics after I realized how easy it was to manipulate the political machinery
in this county — or almost officially doing it — by running for sheriff. I saw
that there might be some serious fun in politics. I covered Goldwater’s
convention in 1964. And I went from Nixon to Kennedy to Nixon. I wanted to have
some say in events, just for my own safety.


You have famously attached yourself to the word “fear” since you wrote
“Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.” Now you’ve written “Kingdom of Fear.” Will you
explain?


This country has been having a nationwide nervous breakdown since 9/11. A
nation of people suddenly broke, the market economy goes to shit, and they’re
threatened on every side by an unknown, sinister enemy. But I don’t think fear
is a very effective way of dealing with things — of responding to reality. Fear
is just another word for ignorance.


You write in “Kingdom of Fear” about the passing of the American century


That’s official, by the way. The American century was the 20th, so sayeth
Henry Luce. And when it ends, Christ, you can’t avoid thinking: “Ye Gods!”


To whom or what is the 21st century going to belong?


That’s something I have not divined yet. Goddammit, I couldn’t have told you
in 1960 what 1980 was going to be like.


You’ve also referred to your beat as the “Death of the American Dream.”
That was the ostensible “subject” of “Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.” Has it
just sort of been on its deathbed since 1968?


I think that’s right.


A lot of people would argue with you about that anyway, and believe that
the American Dream is alive and well.


They need to take a better look around.


But in a way, haven’t you lived the American Dream?


Goddammit! [pause] I haven’t thought about it that way. I suppose you could
say that in a certain way I have.


You said back in 1991 that you were “as astounded as anybody” that you
were still alive. Still drinking, smoking and doing drugs?


I guess I’d have to say I haven’t changed. Why should I, really? I’m the most
stable neighbor on the road here. I’m an honest person. I don’t regret being
honest. I did give up petty crime when I turned 18, after I got a look at jail
– I went in there for shoplifting — because I just saw that this stuff doesn’t
work. There’s a line: “I do not advocate the use of dangerous drugs, wild
amounts of alcohol and violence and weirdness — but they’ve always worked for
me.” I think I said that at a speech at Stanford. I’ve always been a little
worried about advocating my way of life, or gauging my success by having other
people take up my way of life, like Tim Leary did. I always quarreled with Leary
about that. I could have started a religion a long time ago. It would not have a
majority of people in it, but there would be a lot of them. But I don’t know how
wise I am. I don’t know what kind of a role model I am. And not everybody is
made for this life.


In fact, you’ve experienced more than your share of dangerous situations.
You’ve been beaten by the Hell’s Angels. You were in the middle of the 1968
Democratic Convention riots. You’ve been shot at. What’s going on with that?


By any widely accepted standard, I have had more than nine lives. I counted
them up once and there were 13 times that I almost and maybe should have died —
from emergencies with fires to violence, drowning, bombs. I guess I am an action
junkie, yeah. There may be some genetic imperative that caused me to get into
certain situations. It’s curiosity, I guess. As long as I’m learning something I
figure I’m OK — it’s a decent day.


Is there anything you regret?


That goes to the question of would you do it again. If you can’t say you’d do
it again, it means that time was wasted — useless. The regrets I have are so
minor. You know, would I leave my Keith Richards hat, with the silver skull on
it, on the stool at the coffee shop at LaGuardia? I wouldn’t do that again. But
overall, no, I don’t have any regrets.



- – - – - – - – - – -
-




About the writer
John Glassie is a writer in New York.

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Iraq-al Qaida link? Nope. Slate.com\’s \"Saddam and Terrorism\"

April 8, 2003 at 9:07 pm
Contributed by:

Folks,

 

Here’s
an interesting bit of dialogue between a couple of right smartypants:


Daniel Benjamin is a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies and co-author of The Age of Sacred Terror. He was director for
counterterrorism on the National Security Council staff 1998-1999. Edward Jay
Epstein received his Ph.D at Harvard in government, taught at MIT and is the
author of 12 books, including News From Nowhere.


It discusses in some detail the
connections that have been alleged between Saddam and al-Qaida, esp.
Mohamed
Atta, and whether those behind 9-11 had “state support.”

 


 

–C 

Michael Moore – My Oscar \’Backlash\’

April 8, 2003 at 9:07 pm
Contributed by:

Folks,

It’s been awhile since I sent anything out so, as usual, I have a backlog. I
wanted to start off with two updates from Michael Moore.

The theme for today is FEAR.

More to come.

(How are you all holding up out there? How’s this list treatin’ ya? Show of
hands: how many of you are reading the long and difficult ones, like the
histories of the Middle East and the Chomsky? I’m wondering if I should
stick with the shorter stuff…)

–C

My Oscar “Backlash”: “Stupid White Men” Back At #1, “Bowling” Breaks New
Records

April 7, 2003

Dear friends,

It appears that the Bush administration will have succeeded in colonizing
Iraq sometime in the next few days. This is a blunder of such magnitude –
and we will pay for it for years to come. It was not worth the life of one
single American kid in uniform, let alone the thousands of Iraqis who have
died, and my condolences and prayers go out to all of them.

So, where are all those weapons of mass destruction that were the pretense
for this war? Ha! There is so much to say about all this, but I will save it
for later.

What I am most concerned about right now is that all of you — the majority
of Americans who did not support this war in the first place — not go
silent or be intimidated by what will be touted as some great military
victory. Now, more than ever, the voices of peace and truth must be heard. I
have received a lot of mail from people who are feeling a profound sense of
despair and believe that their voices have been drowned out by the drums and
bombs of false patriotism. Some are afraid of retaliation at work or at
school or in their neighborhoods because they have been vocal proponents of
peace. They have been told over and over that it is not “appropriate” to
protest once the country is at war, and that your only duty now is to
“support the troops.”

Can I share with you what it’s been like for me since I used my time on the
Oscar stage two weeks ago to speak out against Bush and this war? I hope
that, in reading what I’m about to tell you, you’ll feel a bit more
emboldened to make your voice heard in whatever way or forum that is open to
you.

When “Bowling for Columbine” was announced as the Oscar winner for Best
Documentary at the Academy Awards, the audience rose to its feet. It was a
great moment, one that I will always cherish. They were standing and
cheering for a film that says we Americans are a uniquely violent people,
using our massive stash of guns to kill each other and to use them against
many countries around the world. They were applauding a film that shows
George W. Bush using fictitious fears to frighten the public into giving him
whatever he wants. And they were honoring a film that states the following:
The first Gulf War was an attempt to reinstall the dictator of Kuwait;
Saddam Hussein was armed with weapons from the United States; and the
American government is responsible for the deaths of a half-million children
in Iraq over the past decade through its sanctions and bombing. That was the
movie they were cheering, that was the movie they voted for, and so I
decided that is what I should ackno
wledge in my speech.

And, thus, I said the following from the Oscar stage:

“On behalf of our producers Kathleen Glynn and Michael Donovan (from
Canada), I would like to thank the Academy for this award. I have invited
the other Documentary nominees on stage with me. They are here in solidarity
because we like non-fiction. We like non-fiction because we live in
fictitious times. We live in a time where fictitious election results give
us a fictitious president. We are now fighting a war for fictitious reasons.
Whether it’s the fiction of duct tape or the fictitious ‘Orange Alerts,’ we
are against this war, Mr. Bush. Shame on you, Mr. Bush, shame on you. And,
whenever you’ve got the Pope and the Dixie Chicks against you, you’re time
is up.”

Halfway through my remarks, some in the audience started to cheer. That
immediately set off a group of people in the balcony who started to boo.
Then those supporting my remarks started to shout down the booers. The L. A.
Times reported that the director of the show started screaming at the
orchestra “Music! Music!” in order to cut me off, so the band dutifully
struck up a tune and my time was up. (For more on why I said what I said,
you can read the op-ed I wrote for the L.A. Times, plus other reaction from
around the country at my website www.michaelmoore.com)

The next day — and in the two weeks since — the right-wing pundits and
radio shock jocks have been calling for my head. So, has all this ruckus
hurt me? Have they succeeded in “silencing” me?

Well, take a look at my Oscar “backlash”:

– On the day after I criticized Bush and the war at the Academy Awards,
attendance at “Bowling for Columbine” in theaters around the country went up
110% (source: Daily Variety/BoxOfficeMojo.com). The following weekend, the
box office gross was up a whopping 73% (Variety). It is now the
longest-running consecutive commercial release in America, 26 weeks in a row
and still thriving. The number of theaters showing the film since the Oscars
has INCREASED, and it has now bested the previous box office record for a
documentary by nearly 300%.

– Yesterday (April 6), “Stupid White Men” shot back to #1 on the New York
Times bestseller list. This is my book’s 50th week on the list, 8 of them at
number one, and this marks its fourth return to the top position, something
that virtually never happens.

– In the week after the Oscars, my website was getting 10-20 million hits
A DAY (one day we even got more hits than the White House!). The mail has
been overwhelmingly positive and supportive (and the hate mail has been
hilarious!).

– In the two days following the Oscars, more people pre-ordered the video
for “Bowling for Columbine” on Amazon.com than the video for the Oscar
winner for Best Picture, “Chicago”.

– In the past week, I have obtained funding for my next documentary, and I
have been offered a slot back on television to do an updated version of “TV
Nation”/ “The Awful Truth.”

I tell you all of this because I want to counteract a message that is told
to us all the time — that, if you take a chance to speak out politically,
you will live to regret it. It will hurt you in some way, usually
financially. You could lose your job. Others may not hire you. You will lose
friends. And on and on and on.

Take the Dixie Chicks. I’m sure you’ve all heard by now that, because their
lead singer mentioned how she was ashamed that Bush was from her home state
of Texas, their record sales have “plummeted” and country stations are
boycotting their music. The truth is that their sales are NOT down. This
week, after all the attacks, their album is still at #1 on the Billboard
country charts and, according to Entertainment Weekly, on the pop charts
during all the brouhaha, they ROSE from #6 to #4. In the New York Times,
Frank Rich reports that he tried to find a ticket to ANY of the Dixie
Chicks’ upcoming concerts but he couldn’t because they were all sold out.
(To read Rich’s column from yesterday’s Times, “Bowling for Kennebunkport,”
go here:
http://www.michaelmoore.com/articles/index.php?article=20030406-nytimes. He
does a pretty good job of laying it all out and talks about my next film and
the impact it could potentially have.) Their song, “Travelin’ Soldier” (a
beautiful anti-war
ballad) was the most requested song on the internet last week. They have
not been hurt at all — but that is not what the media would have you
believe. Why is that? Because there is nothing more important now than to
keep the voices of dissent — and those who would dare to ask a question –
SILENT. And what better way than to try and take a few well-known
entertainers down with a pack of lies so that the average Joe or Jane gets
the message loud and clear: “Wow, if they would do that to the Dixie Chicks
or Michael Moore, what would they do to little ol’ me?” In other words, shut
the f— up.

And that, my friends, is the real point of this film that I just got an
Oscar for — how those in charge use FEAR to manipulate the public into
doing whatever they are told.

Well, the good news — if there can be any good news this week — is that
not only have neither I nor others been silenced, we have been joined by
millions of Americans who think the same way we do. Don’t let the false
patriots intimidate you by setting the agenda or the terms of the debate.
Don’t be defeated by polls that show 70% of the public in favor of the war.
Remember that these Americans being polled are the same Americans whose kids
(or neighbor’s kids) have been sent over to Iraq. They are scared for the
troops and they are being cowed into supporting a war they did not want –
and they want even less to see their friends, family, and neighbors come
home dead. Everyone supports the troops returning home alive and all of us
need to reach out and let their families know that.

Unfortunately, Bush and Co. are not through yet. This invasion and conquest
will encourage them to do it again elsewhere. The real purpose of this war
was to say to the rest of the world, “Don’t Mess with Texas – If You Got
What We Want, We’re Coming to Get It!” This is not the time for the majority
of us who believe in a peaceful America to be quiet. Make your voices heard.
Despite what they have pulled off, it is still our country.

Yours,

Michael Moore
www.michaelmoore.com
http://www.michaelmoore.com/mailing/unsubscribe.php

Coffee, Tea, or Should We Feel Your Pregnant Wife\’s Breasts Before Throwing You in a Cell at the Airport …

April 8, 2003 at 12:07 pm
Contributed by:

Folks,


Speaking of fear, here’s a disturbing story about an airport search gone
wrong. Don’t think it can happen to you? Think again.


Coffee, Tea, or Should We Feel Your Pregnant Wife’s Breasts Before Throwing
You in a Cell at the Airport and Then Lying About Why We Put You There?


–C

Greg Palast – Democracy for sale

April 3, 2003 at 11:20 am
Contributed by:

Folks,

You may recall the
Hustler interview with Greg Palast that I sent around in January. Here are a few more articles from Palast, who is doing more,
solid, investigative journalism about the US (from his role in the UK) than
anybody else domestically, by a wide margin. I just started his book The
Best Democracy Money Can Buy
and the stuff he has dug up is pretty
amazing.

Here’s his “Democracy for sale” talk given to a conference
in Cambridge on 23 March 2002. It goes into much of the same material as
the Hustler interview, with more of a focus on globalization, the
IMF, the World Bank, and the Bush-bin Laden connections. If you have
wondered what all the fuss is about globalization, read this
article! 

Here is a sample of
Palast’s material on the Florida election. If you’re tired of reading, this one
actually has a video you can watch instead of reading the transcript.

There is much more
information on Palast’s Web site, from info about the Florida election to the
Bushes to globalization and a lot of other things.


I’m sure lots of people
would like to try, and many have, to write off Palast as a conspiracy nutter.
Unfortunately for them, his research is too good.


–C

Understanding the US War State

April 3, 2003 at 10:35 am
Contributed by:

Folks,

I thought this was worthwhile for its clear-headed thinking about the way that policy and opinion in the US is formed. The author essentially deconstructs the operative principles of the American “group-mind.”

I guess if you want to understand the US, it helps to be a Canadian!

–C

—–Original Message—–

Understanding the U.S. War State
by John McMurtry
Monthly Review, March 2003

“It is easy. All you have to do is tell the people they are being
attacked, and denounce the the peacemakers for lack of patriotism
and exposing the country to danger.” — Hermann Goering

Genocide used to be a crime without a name. Although the most
heinous of all crimes, the concept was not introduced into
international language until after World War II. Until then, military
invasion and destruction of other peoples and cultures masqueraded
under such slogans as progress and spreading civilization.

I was shocked many years ago when I heard Noam Chomsky say that
genocide was America’s defining political tradition. Then I realized
that the United States (like Canada to a much lesser extent) was
based on destroying the lives and cultures of the 25 million or so
first peoples who had lived in America for millennia.

In the case of the U.S., the story continued with the forcible
seizure of Texas in 1845 from Mexican farmers and indigenous peoples,
and Nevada, New Mexico, Arizona, California and other state
territories shortly afterward in 1849. U.S. troops under the slave-
owning General Zachary Taylor unilaterally invaded its southern
neighbor under the false pretext of avenging American blood, and
General Taylor soon vaulted into the White House as a presidential
war hero. Even though a young Congressman, Abraham Lincoln, exposed
the pretext and connected it to a Anglo-British business strategy to
impose free trade on the regions by financing the prior president,
James Polk, into the White House as General Taylor’s commander.

In 1898, once again under the false pretext of self-defense (when the
U.S.S. Maine sank from an internal explosion), the Philippines, Guam,
Cuba in part, and Puerto Rico were seized from their peoples by
another unilaterally provoked war. This war of aggression and
occupation, like so many U.S. interventions since, was preceded by a
media campaign of whipping up public hysteria and war fever.

Media baron William Randolph Hearst made the famous remark, “You
furnish the pictures, I’ll furnish the war”–not unlike the U.S.
cable and network media daily drum-beat in recent months for war on
Iraq. War is a major violence entertainment, and in close partnership
with the Pentagon, it can go on for months to divert the masses.

The tradition of misleading the American people by false pretexts for
aggressive wars is an old one in U.S. history; but since the fascist
interregnum, war criminal invasions of other countries have not been
accepted by public opinion. The U.S. under the control of the
corporate war party now seeks to reverse this trend. By dint of the
permitted 9-11 plane attacks on the World Trade Center, an open
presidential blank-check has been granted by Congress for attacking
third-world countries so as to occupy their countries and control
their resources.

The now-known blueprint of Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Paul
Wolfowitz and others (written in September of 2001 as the “Project
for the New American Century”) is clear on the plan to shape the
international security order in line with American principles and
interests. Armed domination of the Gulf region transcends the issue
of the regime of Saddam Hussein.

Oil looms large in this plan to rule the world for American
interests. According to a report sponsored by oil corporations from
the Washington Center for Strategic and International Studies, oil is
no longer a commodity to be bought and sold within the confines of
the traditional supply and demand balances, but a determinant of
national security and international power. The U.S. state military
invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq in under two years are expressions
of this new supra-market policy.

Before we pass over the pattern of facts at work as merely
“realpolitik,”, we should note that this armed-state project
resembles fascism: not only in war criminal attacks on other
countries in violation of international law, but in repudiating
market relations to seize others valuable goods by armed force.

Facing Facts –
As demagogic glorification of genocidal invasion once again escapes
naming by a flood of falsehoods and projections onto the latest U.S.
Enemy, we need to remind ourselves of facts that no mass medium once
discussed from October of 2002 to March of 2003. As we lay bare the
ruling deceptions here, we should keep in mind the unifying principle
which is not seen.

U.S. state justifications always project onto the designated Enemy
what the U.S. security state is doing itself. If it loudly condemns
another weaker states weapons of mass destruction, chemical and
biological weapons, violation of international laws, or attempts to
impose its will on the world by terror, then we can deduce that this
is exactly what the U.S. is planning more of, but is diverting
attention from by accusing others.

Test this underlying principle with every international accusation
the U.S. makes next, and you will find it is invariably confirmed.

The tactic works wonderfully with a lapdog press and political class
who are excited into a kind of collective delirium by choral
denunciations of the foreign demon who is the designated Enemy of the
Day. (I will explain why in my analysis ahead of the ruling group-
mind.) So exactly does the U.S. security state project its own
violent policies onto others, that one can tell what vicious policy
it is about to escalate next by by the intensity with which the Other
is accused of the crime.

This is how we can best understand the endless accusation of the
Soviet Union of a plot to rule the world before 1991; and how we can
best make sense of the official U.S. fixation on global terrorism
today. Both predications disclose the inner logic of the U.S. war
states own pattern of behavior. I sometimes wonder whether this is a
deliberate strategic tactic of diversion, or a structure of paranoid
delusion built into the mind-set of U.S. culture.

Let us in this light examine the principal claims and concealments of
the Bush Jr. administration in its pursuit of Iraq. The Bush
administration has tirelessly claimed to be upholding international
law in its pressuring of the Security Council into action regarding
Iraq’s violation of U.N. resolutions and international law.

In fact, since its entry into office the Bush Jr. administration has
sabotaged laws, covenants and monitoring protocols to protect
individuals and peoples against nuclear weapons, biological weapons,
chemical weapons, land mines, small arms, international ballistic
missiles, torture, racism, discrimination against women, arbitrary
seizure and imprisonment, mistreatment of prisoners, crimes against
humanity and war crimes, military weather distortions, biodiversity
loss, and international climate destabilization.

Its latest overriding of international law and due process has been
the forcible usurpation of the Security Council inspections of Iraq.
No rogue state in modern history has remotely matched this continuous
and systematic violation of international law and procedures to
implement international law.

The Bush administration’s preparation and threat of military invasion
against a country thousands of miles from its borders is unequivo-
cally a war crime under international law, including Principles 1,
2 and 6(a)1of the Nuremberg Charter and Article 54 of the Geneva
Convention. The fact that this war crime of preparing for and
planning an invasion of Iraq by U.S.-led armed forces [whatever the
UN decides] has never been openly discussed has promoted the very
aggression which the U.N. is constituted to prevent.

It is not as if there were any doubt about the Bush administration’s
clear intention to put itself above the law as it incessantly accused
Iraq of doing so. It declared from the beginning that it would go it
alone with whoever was willing, and yet not a word of this declared
threat to international peace and security issued from any U.N.
ambassador, including Canada’s Bill Graham, that this was a lawless
intention and plan.

The effect on Iraqi citizens of the long-planned U.S. war of
aggression against Iraq is said to be “their liberation.” The
targeted victims since the first war on Iraq have, however, been
most of all infants and children.

The Bush administration’s planned Operation Shock and Awe is a
self-imagery of Godlike power which is more blind in hubris than in
1991 when the U.S. military assault caused mass infectious disease,
child dysentery and birth mutilation by deliberate bombing of
civilian electricity sources, sewage and water treatment facilities
and by the deployment of nuclear waste in shells and weapons. Over
500,000 children in Iraq have already died as a consequence of the
last war according to UNICEF–a figure predicted in 1991 by the
New England Journal of Medicine, and substantiated in 1999 by the
leading British medical research, Lancet.

Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction — about which the Bush regime has
most pervasively trumpeted its concern — were sold to Saddam at
great profit by the U.S., Britain and other Security Council members.
This is why Bush officials took the original Iraq report to the U.N.
from the Council chair (then their military client state, Colombia),
and deleted all the pages documenting these military sales before
distributing the text to non-permanent members.

Secretary Rumsfeld, meanwhile, has refused to work with the relevant
Senate committees to expose and ensure against continued military
sales to Iraq or its middlemen by U.S. armament manufacturers.

U.S. demands for Iraq’s compliance with U.N. resolutions are not and
have not been its true concern, since far more U.N. resolutions over
far more years have been ignored by the U.S. military partner,
Israel. Thus continuing war crimes and crimes against humanity by
Israeli administrations are still perpetrated with impunity in the
illegally occupied territories of Palestine — for example, by land
and property seizures and continuous enlargement of the illegal
occupation, collective punishments of the population, increasing
assassinations, and destruction of civilian infrastructure and
homes.

Twelve to eighteen UN resolutions prior to the inspections were said
to have been violated by Iraq during its years of living with
militarily enforced destruction of its society. Israel before, and
since, has violated 64 UN resolutions with impunity. No double
standard of international law has been so long-term, blatant and
systematic, except by the U.S. itself.

The regime change all along demanded by the Bush administration
cannot benefit the Iraqi people as promised because the projected
U.S. military occupation has not been about getting rid of Saddam
(who the U.S. armed and supported into power), but has ever more
directly been the forced takeover of Iraq’s publicly owned and
controlled oil reserves. These reserves since the 1950′s have
(despite Saddam’s U.S.-supported coup d’etat) financed the most
advanced social infrastructure in the Arab world, free education, and
universal health care.

During the demonization of Iraq over the last 6 months, its public
oil revenues have enabled a government program of guaranteed food for
all citizens by a publicly run distribution system which the U.N.
World Food Program described as the most efficient in the world. With
oil, as with all else, the greatest enemy to this empire is the civil
commons of publicly owned resources which obstructs corporate market
control. That the Iraqi government has, moreover, put a run on the
U.S. dollar by converting its oil revenues into Euros instead of
dollars is another unspeakable fact which is blocked out of all
corporate media reports.

Watching the War Crime Unfold –
The ultimate target of the U.S. war party has long been the greatest
and most accessible high-quality oil reserves on the planet. The
Bush oil party has long coveted it, and U.S. military invasion has
been the favored blitzkrieg method for getting it over years of
planning — with no response by the Security Council. But world
public opinion has not covered its eyes like governments and the
corporate media. Turkey’s people were 96% against invasion of Iraq as
its government considered large bribes, and Spain’s people were over
90% opposed as its Falangist prime minister joined Tony the War
Poodle in barking for the invasion. Over 30 million citizens from
across the world demonstrated against a U.S.-led invasion in one
weekend, an historically unprecedented event.

The U.S. president’s response to all this has been revealing. He has
told the world throughout that the U.N. itself is on trial, with him
as God’s judge. The Security Council has been told for months that it
either agrees to a U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, or it is irrelevant. If
it fails, the Bush administration will take the law into its own
hands and invade distant and weak Iraq as America’s sovereign right.

Try to remember when you heard this kind of demagoguery and defiance
of international law before. The difference has been most clearly in
the use of the U.N.

Pervasive aerial and ground inspections of Iraq’s territory, soften-
up bombings of defenses in the North and South, and successful
commands to destroy short-range missiles which together had largely
stripped Iraq’s meager defenses by mid-March. During this process,
U.S. and allied demands merely escalated from immediate abolition of
weapons of mass destruction to-without any media noticing — demands
for total disarmament. Best to have a helpless victim.

Has history ever witnessed such a corruptly one-sided scheme to
destroy and loot a defenseless country?

The Ruling Group-Mind–
As I watched the Security Council Meeting on March 19, after military
inspections of Iraq were forcibly terminated by the Bush Jr.
administration’s decision to take the law into its own hands, I was
struck by the intimidation of the Council members. They were in
thrall to a ceremony of avoidance. The hard fact that the U.S.
administration had just stopped the U.N.’s due process by its
decision for lawless armed attack of Iraq was blocked out of view as
if it had not been decided.

That this massive armed military invasion was a grave violation of
international law, the supreme international crime under the
Nuremberg Charter, was never mentioned. The ritual of sacrifice
prevailed instead as if in collective submission to the implacable
ordinance of Fate.

Formal pieties and aversion of the facts ruled. The Secretary-General
was congratulated for removing the inspection teams on the
instruction of the U.S. administration so that they would not be
harmed by its illegal invasion. The inspectors were again and again
praised for inspecting Iraq’s military possessions before the full-
scale illegal invasion forcibly prevented the completion of their
work. Much angst was displayed for the humanitarian catastrophe
about to unfold, with none mentioning that the lawless usurpation of
U.N. process by the blitzkrieg invasion of a suffering poor country
would cause the mass terror.

The long genocide was diplomatically sanitized by abstractions. In
the case of the U.S., Britain and Spain, Saddam Hussein was held
solely responsible. Repeated ritual mantras of concern for
international peace and security, alleged Iraq government violations
not substantiated by the inspectors, official regrets, collective
self- blaming, and much talk of rebuilding the society about to be
destroyed were limned in a sleepwalk of official euphemisms. The
theme that bound them all was the silence on the U.S. planned war-
criminal attack in violation of the will and the legal process of the
U.N. Security Council itself.

Kofi Annan almost spoke out when he advised that a belligerent
country is responsible under law for the costs of occupation. But
the U.N. and Canada were soon ready to pay for picking up the pieces
of another mass destruction of a poor society by U.S.-led forces.

I remembered all the history and accounts I had read of the Third
Reich and the cowardice of official appeasement that enabled every
step. The appeasement now was on the level of the mind itself. No one
dared to say what was happening. Threats and bribes by the U.S. had
for months saturated the proceedings of the Councils judgment, but
there were to their great credit, few takers of the blood money.

The Security Council had repudiated the U.S.-led war by an
overwhelming rejection of any motion for it. For the U.S. now to
still lead an invasion was self-evidently against the Security
Councils will and decision, and thus wholly illegal. Yet there was a
strange refusal to name the crime, the supreme international crime of
a war of aggression against another state. One listened in vain for
one explicit reference to the violation of the U.N. Charter, of the
Nuremberg Charter, of international criminal law, of the Secretary-
Generals own previous statement that a U.S. attack without Security
Council support would be illegal, and of the usurpation of the will
and process of the U.N. Security Council itself.

On the contrary, Iraq was being held accountable to obey the
Council’s every demand to strip its meager defenses as huge U.S. and
British armed forces formed on its borders. Ever louder U.S. threats
of armed invasion outside the law and against Security Council vote
was left to proceed as if it was a natural event. Everywhere in the
media, the inevitable war was bowed before as an ordinance of
destiny. It was only now a question of viewers watching U.S. forces
destroy a society at will and with impunity, an ideal mass market
site for the entertainment of lawless power.

No-one thought to notice from within the Security Council Chamber and
official global culture that every step of the mass terror against an
essentially defenseless people was planned, chosen and executed in
defiance of all international law by a sitting member state.

The monstrous construction had no author. Responsibility fell only on
the victim. The U.S. became another onlooker at the inevitable war.
Once it invaded, it became magnanimous in assigning the costs to
others to pay for its mass destruction. It was now ready to co-
operate with its international partners in the rebuilding of the
country that it destroyed. No-one inside official society outside
thought to hold the U.S. accountable for what it did.

“There is no alternative” took another meaning. Now the no-
alternative world the U.S. rules means criminal war invasion IS an
act of God.

The New Fundamentalism: America is God –
As you observe the criminal war invasion of Iraq, the round-the-clock
commentary and pictures, and the aftermath, watch for a silent
general fact. There will no end of detailed discussion of the
military operations of attack and occupation of a country rendered
defenseless by Security Council demands, with much admiration and
vicarious self-congratulation at the new weapons and strategic moves
of the American Superpower.

There will be no end of experts and commentators communicating
adoringly to audiences about the high-tech assault instruments which
are being tested on a third-world people to see how they work. It’s
a little like a high-school science experiment, advised the Pentagon
Joint Chief of Staff to the militarily embedded CNN medium of public
news.

The fact at the center of the whole conflict and long in dispute
will, however, soon be put down the memory hole with no one Noticing.
No one in the media or government will point out that the biological
and chemical weapons that Iraq was declared to be hiding are not used
and did not in fact exist. No one will think to notice that this, the
main justification of the war–weapons of mass destruction in the
hands of Saddam–was from start to finish a vast and criminal big
lie.

No one will wonder at their own cowardly complicity in the long train
of destructive deceit and war crime even as the invading armies sweep
across the country and 3000 sorties of bombs fall with no hint of a
chemical or biological weapon or nuclear device. Least of all will
servelings of the ruling group-mind connect back to the Third Reich’s
prototype of aggressive war.

It is the Formula. Blame terrorists as the cause of the country’s
police state measures. Accuse every country attacked of being an
imminent threat to it, to justify the invasion. Denounce all
resistance as unpatriotic. Attack and occupy the weak country with
total weaponry. The formula repeats as long as it is not called out.

The group-mind cannot compute what does not fit its fixed
presuppositions. So predictable outcomes follow as if prescribed by
the laws of nature. The inevitable war occurs like ‘El Nino’. Only
the terrible infliction of damages are thought worth perceiving or
talking about. The moral debate is silenced, left to the world’s
peoples in the streets, where only passing painted signs can speak.

The co-ordinates of international law and the rogue war party in
control of the White House are blocked of every discussion as if they
did not exist. There will, in particular, be no discussion of this
administration’s illegal presidency, its ever more ruinous failure to
govern effectively at any level of the U.S. economy, the
environmental meltdown which it leads or the unprecedentedly
pervasive corruption of its lead corporate gang–from all of which
the latest orchestrated war is the ongoing system of violent
diversion.

The “distract and attack” rhythm of one war after another will, if it
is not seen through, continue to succeed with the Formula until the
world is subjugated across its civilizations. As long as the self-
evident can be denied, there is nothing to stop it. Discharges of
condemnation of Saddam Hussein can occupy the mind instead, until the
next Enemy is wheeled into the war theater to extend the U.S. war
states’ rule.

In Canada, the CBC and its retinue of U.S. explainers and apologists
will report the world to us so we cannot see the meaning of what is
happening. The local academy will occasionally provide the choral
affirmation on cue. Thus, Janice Stein of the University of Toronto’s
Munk Center will reassure us on CBC News coverage on March 20, the
day that the U.S. crime against peace began, that, “We are targeting
Iraq’s leadership and not its civilians.”

All are one in America’s view of the world as itself. What cannot be
discussed is the U.S. war crime itself, even to deny it. It is
unspeakable so long as the ruling group-mind remains the invisible
prison of our collective life. The moral syntax of the American group-
mind is the inner logic of the problem. In this era, the group-mind
is American. All its principles are presupposed as the way that God
is presupposed by the religious fundamentalist–an all-powerful, all-
knowing and jealous ruler of the world, which none may doubt without
social opprobrium and attack.

U.S. witch-hunts of those who oppose the religion of America is the
creed’s fanatical mode. But the creed is not confined to expression
within America’s church of self-adoration. It is on a crusade across
the world’s continents, with ruinous destabilization or armed attack
of those who do not submit to its will for “freedom.”

The God of America is primitive. It worships itself. But there are a
set of silently regulating principles at work through all the
phenomena of its rule which together constitute the ruling group-mind
which has imprisoned global culture within its premises since 9-11.

Presupposition 1 of this ruling group-mind is that the U.S. national
security state is America. This assertion is never directly stated
because that would reveal the absurdity of the equation. But the
assumption nevertheless underlies every statement that has proceeded
from U.S. government offices since 9-11.

This preconscious equation explains, for example, why even the U.S.
government’s official opposition, the Democratic Party, has abdicated
from political responsibility in its fear of appearing to oppose
unjustified wars against essentially defenseless third-world
societies in Afghanistan and Iraq. They are incarcerated within the
ruling structure of mind, more paralyzed even than 1930′s Germans in
their dread of being named as unpatriotic. This is a fear that can
only be explained by the equation of the state military command and
its apparatus with America. Beneath the surface phenomena of party
politics rules the instituted group-mind in terms of which perception
itself is constructed. [Besides, nobody gets into the Shadow Govt.
Enclave if they piss off the Executive in the Oval Office.]

Thus, the equation of America to its armed state apparatus is never
publicly challenged in the official culture of the West because the
equation is assumed a priori across the official leaderships of
American allies. No-one who houses the false equation can tell them
apart. They cannot see the demonstrable falsehoods of the war state,
the overthrow of the Republic’s democratic traditions, and least of
all the safety of millions of innocent civilians in other countries.

Here is Why: because they assume America and its national security
apparatus are one and the same. Since they love America, and America
is it, they cannot distinguish their beloved country from the
criminal gang institutions of the National Security Council, the
Pentagon and the CIA. As these rogue secret societies rule across the
world by the force of armed terror, mass disinformation, secret narco-
links, political bribery, and coercion at every level, lovers of
America are obliged to defend this criminal global domination as
America.

This absurd equation obliges them to be, in short, blind dupes. It
then further misleads them into supposing that anyone who opposes a
gangster state rule of the world is anti-American. One absurdity
builds onto another. The disorder ends as a paranoid mass cult
characterized as patriotism — just as in the 1930′s — within the
world’s most powerful industrial state. It is in this false equation
at the baseline of the group-mind that we find the kernel of the
worlds problem–America’s self-definition as absolutist armed force,
unbound by fact or international law.

Presupposition 2 is that America is the ultimate source and moving
line of the world’s freedom and goodness, God’s material embodiment
on earth. This assumption too is presupposed as true by definition,
the prime article of faith of a fanatic religion. Full-spectrum
dominance and pre-emptive attack of threats [even before they occur]
are not merely clinically paranoid delusions of power and
persecution; they follow from the underlying and increasingly
absolute assumption that America is God, the source of all Freedom
and Goodness on the planet.

The expressions of this deranged presupposition are evident in every
speech of the former alcohol and cocaine addict occupying the White
House, and there is no evident opposition from the parishioners of
U.S. official culture. Any indirect questioning or challenge of this
first moral premise of the group-mind is attacked as a betrayal of
the country and what it holds dear.

American freedom comes to mean then, only what establishes and
maximizes the absolute right of the U.S. to command the world–
specifically, to command as inevitable that all societies adopt an
American-style market, American values and culture, and American
military dominance in all areas of the globe as its vital interests.

How do we test the rule of this fanatic basis of thought? It is
expressed in Bush Doctrine policy documents throughout. But we can
more easily discover its ruling principle at work by asking whether
there is any limit placed anywhere on what the U.S. and vassal
corporate states have the right to demand of other peoples and
societies–including unconditional support of full-scale war against
destitute societies over ten thousand miles from American borders.

“Anything goes” is the way of attack-dog journalism; but one hint of
question of this ruling assumption that America is the moving line of
the world’s freedom is that a free press is seen as heresy. The
assumption is thus internalized prior to censorship. Self-censorship
is this regime’s center of gravity, and holds the group-mind in its
prison. Those who oppose it “hate freedom.” Loyalty to this ultimate
premise of social and political thought is what regulates the mind at
a preconscious level prior to statement. It is the identity structure
of the mob-mind across the world. [It is a mindset "possessed by
evil."]

Principle 3 follows as a logical consequent from Principle 2–America
is always and necessarily right in all conflicts with other nations
or peoples or social forces; and they are simply wrong.

This is not a truth which facts can disprove, because it is true by
definition in the ruling group-mind.

Disproving facts are irrelevant or of no consequence, even if by some
chance they make it through the gates of the corporate media. This
third regulating assumption explains why even the hardest facts soon
disappear from sight if they throw doubt on Americas infallible moral
superiority in cases of international conflict–for example, the
conviction of the U.S. by the International Court for war criminal
actions against Nicaragua, and the $13.2 billion damages which were
never paid.

Beneath the selection and exclusion of facts and perspectives which
regulate editorial offices and policies, this third principle of the
ruling group-mind too regulates perception and conversation beneath
direct control. Before an exposing word is spoken, it is ruled out
from within.

It is an inter-subjective operation, like the thought-field of
playing a game. Any fact or argument which calls into question
America’s moral superiority to any adversary is known to be “hostile
to freedom and the good” in advance of its consideration. [That
thought is immediately discarded, lest it "mess up the operation."]

Principles 4 and 5 follow suit as ultimate moral imperatives for all
Americans and their allies.

Any people or nation or social force which does not side with or
opposes the U.S. government is evil (Principle 4) and so must, as an
Enemy of world freedom and justice, be attacked by all means
available [including pre-emptive armed force] before the Enemy
presents a “real” threat (Principle 5).

Principles 4 and 5 have sharpened into patriotic absolutes with the
Bush Jr. regime. Not even fabricated evidence like the manufactured
Gulf of Tonkin attack off Vietnam, or the fictional electricity cut-
off of infant incubators in Iraq in 1991 are thought any longer
essential necessary, to justify a military attack on another people’s
territory and society.

As George Bush Jr. said to a West Point audience this year: “If we
wait for threats to materialize, we will have waited too long.”

There is, therefore, no need for the threat to be real. Threats only
need to be declared. That is is why the attack on Iraq by U.S. and
British armed forces did not require anyone else to confirm that
there was in fact a threat from Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction
being used by terrorists against America. The evil is known, as with
witchcraft, by the accusation itself. Once accused, the Enemy becomes
such by definition, because materialization by fact is too late.

Those who question the designation are sided with the Enemy. You are
with us, or for the terrorists. Bush’s rage against French opposition
to the war of aggression against Iraq thus follows necessarily. The
logic of the ruling group-mind prescribes reality prior to the
phenomenon of “actually happening.”

A self-evident baseline of entitlement is thus instituted for the
rest of the world which is not spoken. America can go to war against
accused enemies as it chooses on the basis of the self-propelling
operations of its ruling group-mind alone. All one has to do is
trigger the known stimuli which activate its value-set and its
attendant emotions of rage.

Since 9-11-01, majority opinion support for America’s New War in any
form follows from this lockstep of the group-mind. It is predictable
so long as it remains unexposed to view. There is no outer perimeter
to the certitude of this program to those who bear it. Whoever is
targeted next can be pursued with the righteous fury of a Salem witch-
hunt, with the mob-mind structured to bay for blood.

Any criticism is suspect and accused, to keep the threat of evil at
bay. Few dare to stand against such a closed program. It is the basis
of all acceptable self-definition. George Bush Jr. himself
exemplifies the group-mind as its creature and primary expression.
That is the secret of his popularity. He expresses the ruling syntax
of the unstated American religion. It is triumphally true and right a
priori. It is “what we are.” God has given America our freedom, and
so it can do no wrong.

The fearful are silent lest they appear to be taking sides against
their country. The group-mind in this way is internalized as the
first requirement of normality. Its hold is everywhere it is not seen
through. That is why most of the Globe or Post’s columnists house it
too, as their own.

Principle 6 of the American group-mind completes the closed circle.
The President of the United States (or those under his command)
cannot commit a crime abroad–whatever crime they in fact commit.

Thus, the U.S. refuses to be bound by the rule of law outside of its
borders. It blocks at every turn the application of international law
to its chief executive and line of command. It refuses to recognize
the International Criminal Court, even as the U.S. demands that the
Court try and convict those the U.S. directs to it.

This President of the United States [unlike his predecessor] is
placed “above the law,” and takes the law into his own hands as a
right to rule that is assumed as sacred. The presidential incumbent
may be attacked for domestic misbehaviors. But once he leads America
abroad, he stands for freedom and justice in the world by definition–
even if he achieved office by violation of election law.

In his mind, his war command cannot commit war crimes or crimes
against humanity on the international plane–even if evidence
overwhelmingly convicts his criminal guilt. It thus follows from the
group-mind’s hold that when George W. Bush led the war criminal
attack on Iraq in defiance of international law and Security Council
vote, not one media or official voice in the U.S. recognized it.

Simultaneously, U.S. Senators unanimously blessed the armed forces
sent to enforce the criminal fait accompli. One can predict these
outcomes from the group-mind’s program. It is structured not to see
what is going on, [but to respond as if "everything is normal."]

As lawless forces rolled over U.N. fences on the border and began the
terror bombing of the capital city, the New York Times decreed
that “everyone hopes for success.” As the illegal attack morphed from
Operation Shock and Awe to Exemplary Destruction to Operation Freedom
Iraq, all of official society gazed in thrall, mute at the trampling
of international law, millions of citizens protesting in the streets,
and the saturation bombing of a poor people’s city with only men
waving rifles to defend them.

No weapons of mass destruction fought back. The ceremony of denial
went on. If the military, corporate and financial axis the President
stands for across the world continue to interfere in elections, train
death squads to kill democrats, melt down entire economies by
coercive prescriptions, and bomb civilian infrastructures to ruin,
the [visible] connected causal structure is blocked out by the ruling
group-mind, as non-existent.

Title to bribery and threats of UN Security Council members to coerce
their vote for war is presupposed as a given right–not to be
questioned even by the UN itself. In this way, the world’s sole
Superpower regulates beneath consciousness much as medieval belief in
the divine right of Kings once ruled. Only now, the group-mind is set
to rule as God–across the globe.

“Ground zero” abolishes the mind that can think beyond it.–
Since opposition to the U.S. gangster state is opposition to the Free
World [in its mind], any act of aggression or potential aggression
must be preempted. If we project this threat to international peace
and security onto any designated Evil Other standing in the way of
liberty, no limit can be placed on the enormity of the preemptive
attack and ransack that is thus justified.

This cruel game goes on as long as the public does not see through
it. It may target Canada’s water “for the gift of America’s freedom”
[if we do not see through the game, in time.]

Opting Out of the Group-Mind –
At the first level, release from the ruling group-mind is by the
shared recognition of its assumptions which only hold the mind so far
as they are not perceived. The ruling group-mind goes deeper than
economics itself because the economy itself is regulated by it.

Conversely, the economy requires collaboration of “others” with it,
to convert any priced commodity into the profit of sale. This may
seem too academic unless we recognize, the U.S. corporate economy
cannot reproduce itself if people choose in ever larger numbers not
to pay one cent for any U.S. product or service until its war state
reforms. [Boycott.]

That may seem too small a movement in our circumstances, until one
realizes the transformation of daily life such an undertaking
entails. Every choice and moment of daily life is restructured by
this regulating purpose. Transcending the ruling group-mind to which
we have become enslaved begins with refusing to expose oneself any
further, to its conditioning–no more American television or media
except to expose their lies; no more American junk food or drink
inside any free home, and no more fast fat-food and beverages outside
it.

No more American autos. No more American appliances. No more American
or vassal-British gas. No more violence entertainment, and no more
American drugs. No American financial services or stocks at any
level. No more U.S. dollars or travel until the regime change comes.

These choice paths of life add up. You cannot go down them all
without transfiguring mind as well as body, and all the economic
relations you enter into. All are revified by the transformation.
Local life economies are reinvested in. Addictions are dropped.
Poisons are blocked. Dumb-down is reversed at every level. It is
unlikely that you can do it all without the joining with others in
the task of designing a life economy, stitch one step at a time.

Nothing could have enabled such a choice across borders except what
has now happened–a war-state aggression with no pretext, a gangster-
state defiance of world public opinion which seeks genocide of its
victim, an undeniable and monstrous crime of mass destruction in a
world where all can see the murderous tyranny in plain sight.

Boycott is not new, but what is new is the transformative focus–the
repudiation at every step of the U.S. war state and all of its
foundations. It has taken the pedagogy of this administration’s
systemic crimes to bring the world to a hard recognition. There is no
health in this ruling system. 90% of the world has rejected its war.
90% of the world can moreover reject the foundations of it in their
everyday lives.

Citizens everywhere are at the all-important end of U.S. money
sequences, which must always convert corporate product into cash
before they can profit and go on expanding. If a lot of people from
across the world stop their money votes for all U.S. products and
services (including the U.S. dollar itself), this is a market revolt
which strikes to all the money arteries of the American corporate
empire. It cannot be withstood even at the level of 5%. Yet it is a
revolt which cannot be put down. It multiplies in volumes and
velocities as the group-mind breaks, word spreads and people act
across their lives. As the effects everywhere yield a better life for
everyone who chooses out of the death economy, the new world is built
stitch-by-stitch through the life-economy of everyday choice.

This is the one strike against the American war state that it cannot
sustain. The strike starts with U.S. oil and gas products across the
world. Every ExxonMobil, Texaco Chevron, and BPAmoco brand pump is
boycotted as the war state’s prime sponsors. Every American media
and its Canadian imitators are switched out of. Every fat-and-cancer
food and drugged beverage is refused. This structure of choice does
not just stop the fuel of the war machine and its conditions. It
releases the lives of all those who choose it and their communities
into new life and well-being.

But the life-mind need not stop with consumer behavior. It confronts
the death machine and its propagandists at every step. The lawful
word and act of speech can reverse the meaning of any milieu with its
demand for truth. Every open node of the circulation of ideas inside
the classroom, the workplace, the windows of the home, the bumper of
the car and bike, the church, the street and the store are its sites.

The functionaries and vehicles of the death-economy and its war state
are always ignorant of life facts. Behind the flood of slogans and
invective, their minds are cliches which cannot think through; only
the armor of the group-mind sustains them.

What has been most lacking in public discourse is the courage of life-
intelligence in the face of the onslaught of unchallenged slogans.
But, once the group-mind is exposed, it cannot stand. It reels in
confusion when others do not acquiesce in its rituals of presumption.
For its bearers are ultimately afraid.

I have counted the word fear four times in a single paragraph of a
Blair or Powell speech. It is the currency of all the justification
for aggression. It can only reproduce in the silence of consent. But
now the peoples of the world, as never before, do not acquiesce. This
squalidly vicious empire is unraveling beneath the cannon and
propopaganda in the very ties of legitimacy upon which all society
depends.

**********************
The preceding essay was delivered at a forum entitled “The Assault on
Iraq and the War Against Democracy: How Should Canadians Respond”
held on Sunday March 23, 2003 in Toronto, Ontario, under the auspices
of Science for Peace:

http://scienceforpeace.sa.utoronto.ca

John McMurtry PhD is Professor of Philosophy at the University of
Guelph and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. His latest book
is ‘Value Wars: The Global Market’ versus the Life Economy published
by Pluto Press.




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