Thursday, May 17, 2007

The Other Holy Land

Bridgethought of the Day: Excerpts from Bridgebuilding 101 - 1) First, there must be agreement that a bridge even be built; 2) Second, there must be consideration for equal traffic access for both sides, which means there must also be somewhere to go once the other side is reached; and 3) The point is to bring the two sides together, not to showcase the superiority of one side over another. Then we have an excerpt from Warmaking 101 - you need bridges to transport materials and resources to your side. So even in war, it might not be a good idea to tear bridges down. Tell that to the war engineers...

Meanwhile, things will only get worse as long as only one side gets heard and the other side gets the shaft. Take, for example, the Israel-Palestine conflict. The U.S. has taken a side. The entire U.S. political system has not only taken that side, but fully integrated it into the power-brokerage of both parties. Hence, a trip to Israel is seen as a political "rite of passage" for any political candidate. In Florida, the popular Governor Charlie Crist is ready for his Israel trip, and the waiting list for people to go along is predictably long and impressive. A Miami columnist dutifully notes the political implications - it can only be good for clout, Mr. Crist. And this is nothing new. An unnamed former member of the House from an unnamed Western state told me years ago that nobody, but nobody, can stay in office without being For Israel, and back off any appearance of sympathy of any kind for that Pariah, the Palestinians.

This has nothing to do with 9-11. It is a decision and a policy put in place since Israel was formed as a nation, and it is not subject to question, inquiry or change. America's support for Israel is institutional, and the converse is true: America's rejection of the Palestinian people is challenged only by careful rhetoric whose intention is to mask what it is doing. But the reality is extremely clear: Israel's enemies are our enemies. Even if it means starving them to death. We've become very accustomed to starving children and oppressed populations. All you do is change the channel. You don't listen to the other side.

Look at what happened in Lebanon. Condi Rice was cool with the slaughter of innocent Lebanese citizens. It wasn't even an "Islamist" or "War on Terror" issue. It was just because Israel decided that Hezbollah were their enemies, and this was the time to eliminate them, and the only way to do that is to eliminate everyone in the same country. Condi need only ask, "Who authorized this slaughter?" The answer: "Israel." "Oh, then, it's cool with me." Any other answer would be political suicide. And political suicide is against America's religion.

Now Israel is busy bulldozing and mowing down families again. But this time they have company. The Palestinians have begun to factionalize, then kill each other. Why?

Taghreed El-Khodary 36, journalist, said:

... a woman called Hoda, 60-years old, who was very afraid to mention
her last name, afraid she will be killed by either Fatah or Hamas, said to me:
"When Israel attacks, we can deal with it. Israel is our enemy. Therefore, we
have the will and it's a challenge. But when Palestinians are clashing, its very
frustrating and depressing, psychologically speaking." Someone else, a Fatah
member whose brother was injured in the clashes, said: "What's happening
between Palestinians is due to the embargo imposed by the international community. Once you starve people they become vulnerable and easily manipulated by both parties to serve their personal interests."


We are talking about people under siege, starved, having had their elected officials kidnapped, killed, imprisoned, and their own families deprived from a means of making a living. But we are institutionally prohibited from even thinking about their plight. They are given a very bad P.R. job, presumably someone's idea of hell. Not strange, really, that an advertising-driven society should feel that "give 'em hell" means "give 'em bad P.R." And it almost worked. After all, did anybody ask, or even think about, what kind of logic could be behind an embargo against the weaker of two warring parties? It's OK to talk about other kinds of human suffering, but not the kind that runs smack into U.S. foreign policy. Not the kind we are responsible about.

Therefore, former Secretary of State Madeline Albright was cool with the death of Iraqi children, because they were "collateral damage", a necessary evil, apparently, in her greater scheme of things. In those days the only one brave enough to speak out against Iraq War I, or against the sanctions, was the late Sen. Paul Wellstone of Minnesota, who gave a moving speech at the time that no one was up to listening to. Truth is OK as a source for jokes, but not for serious debate, let alone policy-making. Nobody took to the streets rioting about the lies that led to Iraq War II either. Some voices are heard, yes, but no out-n-out pressure. All the pressure has been from talk radio, from folks who think The Mexicans are coming to take our culture away. Yes, their voices have been heard. Criminalize immigration, they say. What we need is a Great Wall!

In all fairness, shouldn't we let Don Imus work the fields in Texas for a few weeks? Or better yet, let my personal favorite, Ann "The Witch" Coulter work only one month picking grapes in California - in migrant worker conditions. James Michener, where are you now that we need you? Or if that's too tough, let her work as a maid in a hotel - even better, in one of those "new" detention centers they've built for illegals. Then, and only then, would she deserve the right to wear a blindfold and pose as Justice for reporters. Till then, she's just another corrupt lawyer.

If you like to be different, break from the mold, in a way other than dancing idiotically to an iPod or mouthing Steve Jobs slogans, try reading the blog Raising Yousuf, written by a Palestinian mother describing her day-to-day life in Palestine. Try to see what the news cannot ever show.

Of course, there are many voices, one of a shopkeeper in the Al-Jazeera report referenced above:

What brought this all to fruition was the global and Israeli sieges on Gaza, and the resulting unemployment and lack of wages. That, in addition to the US's military and financial support of Fatah militias - this has an enormous role. We want them to lift the siege. We want them to begin speaking with our government, Hamas included.

He was referring to the Hamas-Fatah fighting, of course, but did not lose sight of those who are pulling the puppet strings.

Or the voice of Hadeel Abo Dayya, 17 , high school student,

We know that the president's office can stop this, but he prefers not to. We
were asking for just 30 minutes ceasefire to allow us and the other trapped
bystanders to evacuate, but they wouldn't even give us that. Now, after this
happened, after I thought I was going to die, after I saw that even ambulances
weren't allowed to reach us, I thought: what is this nation, these people, that
I am working so hard to build? I am crushed. But then I thought; how will the
outside world help me? I have to stay strong and persevere. What I learned is
that the world is like a pencil. Your memory, your life, everything you know or think you know, can be erased in an instant. My passport, our ID cars,
everything is gone now in that fire.

Another take on the "infighting" being really a new tactic of enemies, leading me to wonder about Iraq's much-touted Sunni-Shia conflict. I know many could buy this line, but who fed it to Iraq in the first place? Al-Qaeda? Or the Bush Administration? Or Both, working, as it were, in a strange macabre concert...

And finally, but not least, the voice of Mohammad Salim, 45, unemployed/part-time custodial worker,

The first reason behind this all is the siege and the lack of work and lack
of money. If there is money and work, people won't have time for this nonsense,
and likewise parents can prevent their kids from going out and fighting.
Sometimes I feel the young boys, they are bored and looking for something to do,
so they go out and fight.

Why won't Israel just let us work, just let us live?
There won't be any problems in Gaza then. Not a single person would allow his
children to work in the Palestinian Authority security forces or tanzim then.
For a measly 1,200 shekels they destroy everything.

If they lift the siege, people can begin to feel more of a sense of safety and security. On top of that, 450 of the presidential guards were trained in Egypt with US and Israeli funding - this is good for no one. In days past, they forced women with niqab [face covering] and men with beards to the ground. They executed three men. This has never happened before.

Four or five men in my neighbourhood who have beards shaved them off for fear of being targeted. I stopped going to the mosque in recent days. Who will take care of my kids if some crazy gunman shoots me? We are human beings and we just want to live like the rest of the world. My son, he sometimes watches television stations like Abu Dhabi or Dubai; he sees playgrounds and parks with green grass. And I feel so sad and helpless for him.
This occupation has turned us into beggars.
Every last one of us - from Abu
Mazen down to street cleaners like me, on top of all this infighting. I'm
embarrassed to be sweeping the streets, I really am. But what can I do? I have
13 mouths to feed. And debts are piling up. And even then, it's a temporary work
relief programme. In two weeks, I'll be out of a job again.

Are we really proud of this legacy resulting from our great leaders and foreign policy? When will we stop depriving an entire population of freedom, means of survival, and infrastructure, and then blame them for it? Do we hold them responsible for the actions of neighbors or family members over whom they have no control?

We blame them when some guys go nuts and try to blow people up in public places, mostly without much success. But no one points the finger at Israel when they mow down whole families or their homes, when they kidnap or kill elected officials, or when they deprive an entire population of adequate means of living? All that is supposedly justified. But it's not justified to be angry when your whole means of living, your home, your people, your family are brutalized to make way for the "Chosen People".

What a callous form of insidious anti-Semitism it is indeed to say that to speak out for Palestinian human rights is anti-Jewish. What kind of Jew would want to be associated with oppression, racism and brutality? Please, IPAC, give us all a break!

When will one honest man actually take a trip to the "Other Holy Land" and try to present the side of the oppressed, instead of the side of the rich, powerful, and apparently...heartless...???

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

War against Journalism: Truth vs. Consequences

Bridgethought of the Day: If you want to know what really is going on with any particular issue, never believe the first thing that hits you - it's probably a lie. Keep looking for what destabilizes you most, if you are living a predictable life, or what hits you in the gut as most obviously true, if your life is a struggle, as it should be.

Truth is out there. You just gotta use your brain to find it.

An excerpt from tomdispatch.com on Iraq, and what true journalism should - and DID - report, way back from Day One. Journalism in the person of Patrick Cockburn. Something the American public knows nothing about.

Patrick Cockburn has been hailed by Sidney Blumenthal in Salon as "one of the
most accurate and intrepid journalists in Iraq." And that's hardly praise
enough, given what the man has done. The Middle Eastern correspondent for the
British newspaper The Independent, he's been on the spot from the moment when,
in February 2003, he secretly crossed the Tigris River into Iraq just before the
Bush administration launched its invasion.
Here, for instance, is a typical striking
passage of his, written in May 2003, just weeks after Baghdad fell. If you read
it then, you hardly needed the massive retrospective volumes like Thomas Rick's
Fiasco that took years to come out:
"[T]he civilian leadership of the
Pentagon… are uniquely reckless, arrogant and ill informed about Iraq. At the
end of last year [Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul] Wolfowitz was happily saying
that he thought the Iraqi reaction to the capture of Baghdad would be much like
the entry of the U.S. Army into Paris in 1944. He also apparently believed that
Ahmed Chalabi…, then as now one of the most unpopular men in Iraq, would be the
Iraqi Charles de Gaulle.
"These past mistakes matter because the situation
in Iraq could easily become much worse. Iraqis realize that Saddam may have gone
but that the United States does not have real control of the country. Last week,
just as a[n] emissary [from head of the U.S. occupation Paul Bremer] was telling
academics at Mustansiriyah, the ancient university in the heart of Baghdad, who
should be purged from their staff, several gunmen, never identified, drove up
and calmly shot dead the deputy dean."
How much worse it's become can be measured by the two suicide bombs that went off at the same university a month apart early in 2007, killing not a single deputy dean but more than 100 (mostly female) students.
Or it can be measured by this telling little tidbit written in October 2003: "The most amazing achievement of six months of American occupation has been that it has even provoked nostalgia in parts of Iraq for Saddam. In Baiji, protesters wereholding up his picture and chanting: ‘With our blood and with our spirit we will die for you Saddam.' Who would have believed this when his statue was toppled just six months ago?"
Or by this description, written in the same month, which offers a vivid sense of why an insurgency really took off in that country:


"US soldiers driving bulldozers, with jazz blaring from
loudspeakers, have uprooted ancient groves of date palms as well as orange and
lemon trees in central Iraq as part of a new policy of collective punishment of
farmers who do not give information about guerrillas attacking US troops… Asked
how much his lost orchard was worth, Nusayef Jassim said in a distraught voice:
'It is as if someone cut off my hands and you asked me how much my hands were
worth.'"


Or by this singular detail from June 2004 that caught the essence of the lawlessness the U.S. occupation let loose: "Kidnap is now so common [that] new words have been added to Iraqi thieves' slang. A kidnap victim is called al-tali or the sheep." Or this summary of the situation in May 2004, one year after Bush's "Mission Accomplished" speech:
"Saddam should not have been a hard act to follow. After 30 years of disastrous
wars, Iraqis wanted a quiet life. All the Americans really needed to do was to
get the relatively efficient Iraqi administration up and running again. Instead,
they let the government dissolve, and have never successfully resurrected it. It
has been one of the most extraordinary failures in history."

Friday, May 11, 2007

A Bridge over the River of Blood

Bridgethought of the Day: There's nothing quite so difficult to get over as the brutalization of one's loved ones - except possibly the death of one's conscience...

Now is for me not the time to write anything, which is probably why I am doing it. But wherever I look, images haunt me. Lebanon. I must post something about Lebanon, especially Lebanon last summer. The absolute callousness expressed, to my horror, by Condoleeza Rice, when Israel began their aerial slaughter of the civilian population of Lebanon. Her attitude - orchestrated by Bush-Cheney-Rumsfeld, fed by an insane Israeli "movement" that seems to have taken over what was once a national conscience, or at least claimed to be - her cold "see no evil, hear no evil" blindness ignoring the obvious in front of her and the entire world, poisoned the world's view of America. America was no longer humanitarian. America was in it for power, and to hell with human beings. It was obvious to the world that for America, it's all about P.R.

Once upon a time, there was diplomacy. There was this veneer of compassion. There were token words acknowledging human struggles, human rights, universal values. I even fantasized that Condi Rice was a part of that veneer. She was human, someone who understood suffering, oppression, struggle. And in whatever decision, whatever power-drunk moment, whatever oblivious self-congratulation, whatever neoconical delusion, she just turned around. Turned her back. No, it was not evil. Israel must defend itself. No, it's not genocide. Israelis are victims. They are victims of terrorism. We must fight terrorism. Right down to the last Arab woman and child. To hell with terrorists. In the name of 9-11. In the name of the Holocaust. Bomb the airport. Those are not families. They are Islamists harboring terrorists. We will save our own, and then we will begin the slaughter. God bless America.

But what she turned her back on was her conscience. And she is not alone. A lot of people in power here have turned their back the same way. They play the word "evil" like some kind of satanic accordion. We are not evil. They are evil. See no evil. Hear no evil. Terrorism is evil. But killing children has to be "balanced out" by the effete pretty-boy complaints of those long-suffering residents who can't even get a decent night's sleep from the Devil's Katyushas. Let them sleep, so their armies can decimate the civilian population of Lebanon in exchange for two Israeli soldiers. Yes, Condoleeza, the applause is deafening. How brave. How free.

We used to chide the Soviet Union for their "propaganda". Before that, it was the Nazis' "propaganda" that promoted their evil agenda. Every dictator had no news, only propaganda. Every authoritarian regime was dominated by propaganda. We always refer to "state-run media" or state-run propaganda machines. But we were always about news, about information, about the free exchange of ideas, about truth, about telling it like it is. "We report - you decide." We were always for the journalists, the reporters, those brave souls who risk their lives to see what's really going on and telling the world, secreting out precious truths under the noses of tyrants. We were never the purveyors of propaganda. We were never a "regime". We were never the ones to sit back and watch slaughter. We sent our troops to save the world.

So where were we when Israel systematically slaughtered Lebanese civilians and infrastructure? Wasn't it enough that they had just begun to pull themselves out of a long, devastating civil war? Are we seriously blaming "terrorism"? Are we that callous, that stupid, that blockheaded? We can't even recognize a nation of peaceful citizens who love their country and once managed to be the only place where democracy, three religions at war elsewhere, and a mixed but sophisticated population managed to peacefully coexist? We can't even tell the difference between them with their various groups, and a group such as al-Qaeda? We can't even tell the difference between civilians and military? What the hell are we doing?

Condi fell suddenly from intelligent statesman (statesperson) to P.R. tool. It was no longer possible to view her as her own person. She would always be contaminated by Bush, Cheney, and the agenda of this right-wing Israeli National Socialist regime. She would always be no more than a P.R. person, a gofer working for the power-brokers for the Marie Antoinette of the Middle East. But this Marie Antoinette has her cruel side, despite that oh-so-cultivated air. She does not say, oblivious, "Let them eat croissants." If the Palestinians want bread, she knows where to dump her excrement. She just builds a nice big wall so all those lovely Marie Antoinettes can enjoy their non-Holocaustian excesses far from the madding masses of that Arab trash. We are the Israelis. They are low, evil, base, Arab, goyim. They are to Israelis what Jews were to Hitler, et al. Something to be eliminated. So bring on the bulldozers. Bring in the settlers. The Master Race. Manifest Destiny. The Chosen Ones. A new kind of peace.

Peace without bridges.

Peace without conscience.

It has all the stability of an atom with two nuclei.

Friday, May 4, 2007

The Dark History of the Great White Hope

Bridgethought of the Day: One can't be constantly inspired - the highs, the lows, the G's, the terrifying near-misses, the crashes, the soaring moments that never die until we do - taken all together, would probably kill us. But background inspiration, inspiration wallpaper, constantly moving, containing the sparks we desperately need, is a good temporary solution.

Below is an article, i.e. one hell of an article, posted on gess' blog, which is being deleted, so I'll keep at least this post for posterity. It's worth looking at again - if only for inspiration.



The Comedy of Terror

They say this town is full of cozenage, As, nimble jugglers that deceive the
eye, Dark-working sorcerers that change the mind*, Soul-killing witches that
deform the body, Disguised cheaters*, prating mountebanks, And many such-like
liberties of sin.
—William Shakespeare, The Comedy of Errors

*(My note:) Sounds like the collusion of politicians and corporate interests, and their secret orgies with the media.


Over four hundred years ago, William Shakespeare evoked the specter of public spellbinders: “nimble jugglers,” “dark-working sorcerers,” and “soul-killing witches” who “deceived the eye,” “changed minds,” and “deformed the body.” In this, the first of his comedies, Shakespeare summoned the ghost of a corrupted city, a deformed body politic owed to “disguised cheaters” and “prating mountebanks.” He was, of course, obliquely referring to Elizabethan London, a town immersed in disputatious politics, which swept over and implicated Shakespeare and others constituting England’s cultural intelligentsia. And London’s theater, a principal site of public opinion forming, contentious elite patronage, and artifice, translated the state’s interests into beguiling entertainment. In all these matters, it is tempting to transfer Shakespeare’s insights to the circumstances of present-day American politics and the dominant media and journalistic cultures that function to conceal that disturbing reality from the American public. Historically in America, national crises have tended to spawn the worst excesses in journalism and mass culture. And presently, with the formation of media conglomerates, the so-called war against terrorism has inspired a conformist and sometimes duplicitous mainstream press. As is the casewith Shakespeare’s outsider, Antipholus of Syracuse, it devolves on strangers to the city—in this instance the American state—to discern its eye-deceiving practices.


For months, the peoples of this America have existed under a reign of speakable terror. And it is a transparently speakable occurrence, given the tens of thousands of words and pictures that have deluged this country each day that has followed last summer. The onset was the horrifying televised spectacle on September 11, 2001: commercial flights transformed into weapons of destruction. The visual scenes were profoundly shocking, but over the next several hours, another source of unease became manifest. Scanning the sea of networks, it became evident that they disposed of only marginally competent newsgathering contrivances. They could not report on who or what occupied the World Trade Center (WTC); who was likely to be in the buildings that morning; or what had transpired on those planes with so many cell phone–bearing passengers. Instead, following the train of horrors of the first few hours, little real information was attached to the recycling images of the already obvious destruction and death.

This would prove to be the first and last of those instances of verifiable abominations, which streamed across television screens, newspaper front pages, and magazine covers over the succeeding months. Unedited and unadulterated on that first day, from that moment until now the notion of terror was reappropriated and reapportioned by the state and its diverse cast of “disguised cheaters.” A raw, collectively experienced event was deliberately and cynically reconfigured into an absurd abomination of propaganda, public manipulation, and the counterfeiture of human rights. Licensed by these machinations, everything that preceded September 11 was obliterated. And in lieu of an explanatory back story, a history, the public was lured into a sycophantic chorus on “evil.” The history, as usual, was well worth forgetting.
State terror—that is, a government’s employment of violence against noncombatants— had been a part of American history even before the founding of the American republic. In the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries, state terror was almost inextricably linked to what were termed the “Indian wars,” and both a distant parliament as well as the colonial officials at hand orchestrated it. And once African slavery replaced impressed Europeans and enslaved Native Americans, black women, children and men, too, became the victims of colonial, then state and, eventually, federal programs of terror. By the end of the nineteenth century, when the republic was being altered into an empire, “bandits,” that is, their patriots, in the Philippines, Puerto Rico, and Cuba were subjected to similar disciplines. Fitful (and occasionally more insistent) qualms aside, in the next century the American state extended its merciless violence onto innocent civilians in the Caribbean, Central America, Asia, the Middle East, and Africa. As the century began, so would it conclude. Just two years short of the century’s end, the nastiness was visited on Europe’s Yugoslavia with the destruction of power plants, bridges, hospitals, and other civilian resources.

In an earlier time, before the formulation of notions like war crimes, crimes against humanity, the genocide convention, and global human rights, later observers might have constructed the anarchy of international law as an absent brake. However, when the International Court of Justice, the world court, was established in the mid-1940s, this was no longer the case. Under the signature of President Truman, the United States consented to the jurisdiction of the court. For forty years, the United States remained within the adjudication of the International Court.

But in 1986, the Reagan administration unilaterally rescinded the court’s authority, preferring international anarchy to the public humiliation of a formal judgment on its conduct of foreign policy in Central America.
The occasion was Nicaragua v. United States of America, a suit brought by the Nicaraguan government to the International Court. On June 27, 1986, the court published its findings, among them rejecting the United States’ assertion that it had no jurisdiction. Some of the world court’s decisions doubtlessly concern state terror:
By twelve votes to three: Decides that the United States of America, by training, arming, equipping, financing and supplying the contra forces or otherwise encouraging, supporting and aiding military and paramilitary activities in and against Nicaragua, has acted, against the Republic of Nicaragua, in breach of its obligation under customary international law not to intervene in the affairs o another State.



By fourteen votes to one, Finds that the United States of America, by producing
in 1983 a manual entitled “Operaciones sicológicas en guerra de guerrillas,” and
disseminating it to contra forces, has encouraged the commission by them of acts
contrary to general principles of humanitarian law.1

Mark Weisbrot recently recalled just what “principles of humanitarian law” were violated in Nicaragua: “They [the U.S. agencies and the contras] waged war not so much against the Nicaraguan army as against ‘soft targets’: teachers, health care workers, elected officials (a CIA-prepared manual actually advocated their assassination). . . . They blew up bridges and health clinics, and with help from a U.S. trade embargo beginning in 1985, destroyed the economy of Nicaragua.”2 The corporate American press said and wrote little about these actions. And when they were infrequently noted, there was nothing like the apocalyptic language of today (“threats to civilization,” etc.) to suggest that an American government and its surrogates had violated the basic principles of democracy.

The court awarded Nicaragua $17 billion. And beyond U.S. shores, the decision was applauded widely. Unreported in the American press, Pope John Paul II, for one, congratulated the court on its vindication of international law. The debt was, however, “forgiven” by a new government in Nicaragua, installed as a beneficiary of the undeclared American war on that country.

What the Reagan government fomented in Nicaragua was merely a complement to the actions of preceding American governments in Central America. For thirty years, in Guatemala, El Salvador, and Honduras, U.S. officials, covert operatives, and military personnel had supported state terrorism that left hundreds of thousands dead, among them peasants, priests, nuns, unionists, political leftists, and the like. Much of this, too, was unreported, or at best misreported at the time. So a few years back, when President Clinton issued a public apology to Central Americans for (some) of the actions of his predecessors, it came somewhat as a surprise for a majority of the American public. That same public was equally bemused in 1997 when Gary Webb, then of the San Jose Mercury News, published the results of his investigation into the collaboration of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) with Central American cocaine smugglers. The CIA’s inspector general eventually confirmed most of Webb’s most damaging allegations, but the American press chose to misrepresent or ignore that report too.3

Now you may aver that all that was in the past. That was how Barbara Walters, the venerable television journalist/personality, responded to a critic of the present war on terrorism when he sought to detail the long relationship between the Taliban and various American governments. But as the ancient Greeks recognized, and I paraphrase, an unexamined past has a tendency of repeating itself.

In the second week of April of 2002, the Venezuelan military (according to the American press) sought to overthrow the elected president, Hugo Chavez. Venezuela is the third-largest exporter of oil to the United States and the fourthlargest economy in Latin America. Chavez, a former paratrooper, is a left-leaning populist, who himself had sought to overthrow a previous Venezuelan government in 1992. He was imprisoned, and on release began to construct a broad-based alliance against the established powers in that country. In 1998, he won the presidency by popular vote. With a new constitution in hand, Chavez began his dismantling of the economic and political structures, which had long secured the privileges of wealth in Venezuela.

But according to the reports published of the coup in the Los Angeles Times, the New York Times, and the Washington Post, Chavez was “reckless,” and provoked his own dismissal by the Venezuelan military. Now, according to the non- U.S. press, it appears that beginning in June of last year the Bush administration funded and assisted in the planning of the coup. These revelations in the London Guardian in large part result from the fact that the coup failed after two days.4 But the corporate American press remained unrelievedly hostile to Chavez and loathe to acknowledge U.S. involvement in his aborted ouster. Paradoxically, while trivializing or openly denying such a possibility, some papers forwarded conceivable justifications. The Washington Post played the race card, describing Chavez as “darkskinnedand kinky-haired,” contrasting him to one of his opponents (Rear Admiral Carlos Molina) who is opportunely “light-skinned.”5 In the Wall Street Journal, columnist Mary Anastasia O’Grady assured her readers that the coup had been “a spontaneous action” but, on the other hand, “Fidel Castro’s handprint was all over Mr. Chavez’s comeback.”6 The New York Times gently profiled Otto J. Reich, assistant secretary for state on Latin America, the current adminstration’s point man in relations to the southern hemisphere. Reich, the Times recalled, is a former Cuban, a hard-line anti-Castroist, a former lobbyist for Mobil Oil, and the aide in the Reagan State Department who (according to the general accounting office) had violated the law by covertly preparing pro-contra propaganda for publication in American newspapers. Yet despite his deserved reputation for lying and “nimble juggling,” the Times published without contest Reich’s declarations denying the United States’ involvement in the coup in Venezuela.7

The failure of the American press to interrogate the employment of state terrorism by American governments, past and present, is merely a smidgen of the dominant practices that misinform the American people. Take, for instance, the voting debacle in Florida in 2000. Most Americans are under the impression that the presidential election was principally marred by voting machine chads and butterfly ballots. These, indeed, were at the center of the protracted drama concocted in the mainstream media in the postelection months. However, the Commission on Civil Rights and the lawsuit filed by the NAACP, NAACP v. Katherine Harris et al., provide a radically different narrative. The commission’s report, “Voting Irregularities in Florida during the 2000 Presidential Election,” of June 2001, based on the testimony of one hundred witnesses and the review of more than 100,000 pages of documents, concluded that “perhaps the most dramatic undercount in Florida’s election was the uncast ballots of countless eligible voters who were turned away at the polls or wrongfully purged from voter registration rolls.”8

It was not the counting of ballots but the counting of voters that was really at issue. The lawsuit brought by the NAACP and twenty-one black Floridians provides further details of the diverse and heinous practices that disenfranchised thousands of blacks and Latinos in Florida. The Florida Highway Patrol (FHP) set up numerous unauthorized (according to its commander, Colonel Hall) roadblocks, which interfered with black motorists on the way to the polls—some of the targets were black college students; at several polling stations in predominantly black neighborhoods, the FHP parked unmanned patrol cars for several hours; perhaps thousands of registered Latino and black voters were erroneously (?) purged as “felons” from the voters register;9 in their affidavits, experienced poll workers, who had attempted to verify voter registrations, contrasted the three hours delay in 2000 to the customary ten minutes characteristic of previous elections; in the targeted counties, polling stations were closed early or closed while frustrated voters waited in line to vote; black voter applications went unprocessed for months; and longtime voters found themselves unexpectedly declared ineligible.10 On February 15, 2002, Florida’s challenge to the lawsuit was dismissed by a district court judge; the case is currently scheduled for trial in August 2002.

Since dissembling on the part of the corporate media is now epidemic, it is nigh impossible to track the volume of nonsense served up to the American public. In collusion with a secretive government, which now possesses legal authority for unconstitutional powers—the ACLU (American Civil Liberties Union) informs us that the U.S.A. PATRIOT (Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism) Act violates five of the Bill of Rights amendments—public deception and misdirection constitutes the most direct threat to public knowledge.11 How are Americans expected to assess the meaning and significance of the war in Afghanistan when they are denied knowledge of the pre–9/11 activities of the Clinton and Bush administrations?

One of the most striking phenomena of the September attacks was the appearance of media “experts” with detailed knowledge of Osama bin Laden. Within days of the attacks, Pat Robertson recalled his meetings with bin Laden and Taliban leaders while hosting his 700 Club on the ABC Family Channel network. And scores of retired military officers and intelligence agents were paid undisclosed but presumably handsome fees by television networks anxious to take advantage of years of (unexplained) experience in Afghan territory. Some of the experts were frauds, of course (for example, Fox News’s “Colonel” Joseph Cafasso),12 but notwithstanding the bogeymen, an intriguing but still mostly submerged portrait emerges: once again—like Vietnam, Panama, Grenada, and so on—a cold war enterprise has produced an American invasion. And like these other instances, the official justification has more than likely served as a pretense. For what other reason, except to conceal an unacceptable truth, has the administration opposed a public investigation of the attacks on New York and Washington, D.C.? But as congresswoman Cynthia McKinney has asserted: “If the Secretary of Defense tell us that his new military objectives must be to occupy foreign capital cities and overthrow regimes, then the American people must know why.”13

The vast majority of peoples beyond our borders recognize the American government’s hypocrisy on terrorism. They were appalled at the spectacle of state terror recently unleashed by Israel on the Palestinian people and dismayed by the cynical collaboration between Israel and the United States. While in U.S. newspapers and on U.S. screens media sorcerers wove spells of propaganda about the war against terrorism, the world media reported a very different reality: Palestinians used as human shields, peace activists in the Occupied Territories being beaten and shot by the Israeli army, humanitarian workers harassed, and emergency vehicles destroyed before they could lend aid to Palestinian victims.

In Colombia, as it was in Central America, the U.S. state is providing billions in military aid, training, and equipment to a military and a paramilitary league guilty of terror. But despite the “prating mountebanks,” which dominate American media with their recitations of official information, there are grounds for optimism. Surveys indicate that few Americans have real confidence in the news media (14 percent) and in major business corpora- tions (12 percent). For the moment, however, as congresswoman McKinney stated in late March, an unelected government has seized illegal powers. That must be opposed with every democratic weapon in our arsenal.


Notes

1. The particulars of the decision included: “Decides that the United States of America, by certain attacks on Nicaraguan territory in 1983–1984, namely attacks on Puerto Sandino on 13 September and 14 October 1983, an attack on Corinto on 10 October 1983; an attack on Potosi Naval Base on 4/5 January 1984, an attack on San Juan del Sur on 7 March 1984; attacks on patrol boats at Puerto Sandino on 28 and 30 March 1984; and an attack on San Juan del Norte on 9 April 1984; and further by those acts of intervention referred to in subparagraph (3) hereof which involve the use of force, has acted, against the Republic of Nicaragua, in breach of its obligation under customary international law not to use forceagainst another State.” Nicaragua v. United States of America, International Court of Justice, June 27, 1986, available at www.icj-cij.org/icjwww/idecisions/isummaries/inussummary860627.htm.
2. Mark Weisbrot, “What Everyone Should Know about Nicaragua,” Z Magazine, November 9, 2001.
3. For an example, see James Adams’s review of Webb’s book, “Dark Alliance: The CIA, the Contras, and the Crack Cocaine Explosion,” New York Times Book Review, September 27, 1998, 28.
4. See Duncan Campbell, “American Navy ‘Helped Venezuelan Coup,’ ” Guardian, April 29, 2002.
5. Scott Wilson, “Clash of Visions Pushed Venezuela toward Coup,” Washington Post, April 21, 2002.
6. Mary Anastasia O’Grady, “Venezuela Rejected a Coup, but Its Future Is No Brighter,” Wall Street Journal, April 19, 2002.
7. Christopher Marquis, “Combative Point Man on Latin Policy: Otto J. Reich,” New York Times, April 18, 2002.
8. U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, “Voting Irregularities in Florida during the 2000 Presidential Election,” June 2001, available at www.usccr.gov/.
9. Based on a late-nineteenth-century Jim Crow law, Florida has purged some 900,000 “felons” from its voter register. In 2000, Katherine Harris, Florida’s secretary of state, hired DataBase Technologies, a Georgia company, to purge felons from the Florida rolls. See Lisa Getter, “Florida Net Too Wide in Purge of Voter Rolls”; and Getter, “Thousands Were Wrongfully Called Felons: Errors May Have Affected Presidential Election,” Los Angeles Times, May 21, 2001.
10. See NAACP v. Katherine Harris et al., available at www.aclufl.org/naacp_v__harris.html.
11. See Nancy Chang, “The USA PATRIOT Act: What’s So Patriotic about Trampling on the Bill of Rights?” Center for Constitutional Rights, November 2001, available at www.ccr-ny.org/whatsnew/usa_patriot_act.asp.
12. Cafasso served as a military consultant for Fox News for four months. His entire military career consisted of forty-four days of boot camp in 1976. See Jim Ruttenberg, “At Fox News: The Colonel Who Wasn’t,” New York Times, April 29, 2002.
13. Cynthia McKinney, “A Statement on the Events of September 11,” Black Commentator, May 8, 2002, available at www.blackcommentator.com/rep_mckinney.html.
Source: Radical History Review, Issue 85, p164, 7p; By Cedric J. Robinson

What were you expecting - grass roots?


Bridgethought of the Day: If anything was more important than a good PR campaign, it's the heavens and the earth and everything in them.


Including, of course, grass roots.


As for the Republican Simulated Duel-in-a-Reagan-box, there really is only one candidate who stands out and we all know who he is:
DR. RON PAUL!
No, he's not a frontrunner. No, none of the manic/depressive commentators seemed at all impressed. No, he doesn't have that way of being all things to all people. No, he just speaks his mind.
"Always be ready to speak your mind, and a base man will avoid you." (William Blake, The Marriage of Heaven & Hell.) Of course, the field is full of men ready to speak what they want you to think is in their mind, or what they think will make you think good thoughts about them. Does that mean their supporters are base? "We report - you decide."
So there are two kinds of grassroots: one is the people, the ostensible "employers" of this entire U.S. government (and where else does the boss get to be the pawn and the forced subsidizer of others' agendas?); and the other is principles. Yes, I believe principles exist. Those who have them also have a certain integrity. And principles should never be confused with dogma.
Ron Paul is clearly outstanding as a candidate with principles who is ready to speak his mind. Ah, and one more important distinction. You can tell from his words that he actually uses his mind.
This means he is probably one of the best men suited to an actual Presidency over an actual nation called the United States of America.
But unfortunately, we're not voting in such an election - yet. There's an aura of falsehood and betrayal that hangs over the political process these days. If instead of voting for an image, i.e., figurehead (top question in post-debate mediamonster mash: who looks most presidential? as if this was, hands-down, The Clincher), why don't we vote for the man who has the highest principles, most honesty and integrity, and most intelligent and experienced use of the tool we'll all need most - his mind???
Now I know the answer to that haunting question that has dogged me for years: why do we keep getting, usually, uninspiring and compromised candidates? Because the really qualified people don't stand a chance. It's all about the sales pitch.
Sell a President, sell a war.
So some dolts thought McCain looked most Presidential. Everything he said was meaningless drivel with frightening undertones of not knowing what the hell he's doing mixed with no objection to show off his macho side by invading another nation or two, hey. Who said we're not the greatest thing in the world?
"Define 'thing', Senator McCain."
"(Laughing, as usual) Come on, you know what I mean (more laughing)... it means what the American people say it means, and the American people know that when I say something, I mean it."
"Mitt Romney, how do you think your religion would affect your judgment as commander-in-chief?"
"The same way religion would affect any commander-in-chief's judgment - it would become more acute and focused on what matters: family, taxpayers, and national security - and working on both sides of the aisle."
"Mr. Giuliani, why don't you work on both sides of the aisle?"
"Who said I don't work on both sides of the aisle? I work for those who create fear, and those who fear, or should be afraid. Very afraid. Because I mean to unite the country again behind a vision - of terminating all Islamofascists NOW! And tightening security, because we can never be too secure, only too liberal!"
Dear Dr. Paul, Please deliver us from this posturing, pompous verbiage, and that weirdly vague Dream of suspiciously unrealistic Success, which is continuously lit by the floodlights of Ronnie, who saved Republicans from being a dreadfully boring, obnoxious cadre of old WASPS planning wars and gutting economies on a Grand Old Scale.
Dear Republican Voter, Please send these Spinning Salesmen home to the lot, and pick someone who has the guts to stand against the Mr. America contest.
Better yet, let's put a Democrat in office and see what happens. And put Ron Paul in charge of Homeland Security, only add the word "Constitution" in the middle.

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

MayDay! MayDay! Republicide!

Bridgethought of the Day: We basically live in two worlds - reality and fantasy. The first involves hard work but can produce success; the second gives immediate sense of success, followed by crashing failure, often destruction. That's why we need to distinguish between inspiration - a positive use of fantasy - and guidance...

On The Day After the anniversary of the Declaration of Mission Accomplished, a study in Fantasy Success, your best bet is to read Tom Engelhardt's TomDispatch article on this special occasion, which gives the best take on it - some excerpts below:

The "magic hour light" of May 2003 has disappeared, along with those glorious photos from the deck of the carrier. The sort of descriptions you see today, as in a recent David Ignatius column in the Washington Post, sound more like this: "Republicans voice the bitterness and frustration of people chained to the hull of a sinking ship." (The USS George W. Bush, undoubtedly.) Oh, and the President and what's left of his tattered administration have stopped filming on a Top Gun-style
movie set and seem now to be intent on remaking The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.
This White House has plunged Iraq and the world into the geopolitical equivalent of a blood-and-gore exploitation film that simply won't end. Call that "Mission Accomplished"! ...

Four years later, U.S. prisons, one of the few reconstruction success stories in Iraq, are chock-a-block full, holding 18,000 or more Iraqis in what are essentially terrorist-producing factories; Iraq has the worst refugee problem (internal and external) on the planet with perhaps 4 million people in a population of 25 million already displaced from their homes (202 of whom were admitted to the United States in 2006); the Iraqi government inside the Green Zone does not fully control a single province of the country, while its legislators are planning to take a two-month summer "vacation"; a State Department report on terrorism just released shows a rise of 25% in terrorist attacks globally, and 45% of these attacks were in Iraq; 80% of Iraqis oppose the U.S. presence in their country; 64% of Americans now want a timetable for a 2008 withdrawal; and the President's approval rating fell to its lowest point, 28%, in the most recent Harris poll, which had the Vice President at a similarly record-setting 25%. ...

As a senior advisor to the President told journalist Ron Suskind back in 2002:
"[G]uys like me were ‘in what we call the reality-based community,' which he defined as people who ‘believe that solutions emerge from your judicious study of discernible reality... That's not the way the world really works anymore,' he continued. ‘We're an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality... We're history's actors... and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do.'"


The U.S. CounterTerrorism Center just released statistics showing that from 2005-2006,
terrorism increased in Iraq 91%, and "Of the 14,338 reported terrorist attacks worldwide last year, 45 percent took place in Iraq, and 65 percent of the global fatalities stemming from terrorism occurred in Iraq. In 2005, Iraq accounted for 30 percent of the worldwide terrorist attacks." As well, "Almost all of those incidents involved the death, injury or kidnapping of at least one person. All told, the number of people killed, injured or kidnapped as a result of terrorism in Iraq jumped 87 percent, from 20,685 to 38,713."

There is so much more to be said and read about this, but it has become all too obvious... the war in Iraq has not brought democracy, liberty, freedom, or anything approaching this to Iraq. In fact, even the oil fields, which drew us there like a magnet, may be more difficult to nab at this point. If the Mission was not War on Terror, but War for Terror, then it was accomplished!

Otherwise, we'll have to take a more realistic position: it was the massacre of another nation, one that was once a republic, and we'll have to plead guilty to ... republicide...
something that never happened in Vietnam, or when we nuked Japan, or any other U.S. war involvement. We even avoided it in the Civil War. Is it time, then, to say "Goodbye Iraq"? Or should we hold a public referendum in Iraq for all Iraqis to vote on: US stay and help? or US go and good riddance... I'll bet the violence will stop long enough for the polls to stay open.

One Way to Fight Against Torture

Valtin's diary at The Daily Kos presents an extremely important issue about torture that we can all take action against: the American Psychologists' Association (APA) and their support of the government's position on torture, especially at Guantanamo. As we know, the U.S. government is heavily involved in torture of detainees at Gitmo and elsewhere, relying heavily on psychological torture and mind torture in combination with physical torture. As we should know, in many ways, psychological torture in combination with physical torture is the worst there is. But what most of us don't know, is that the APA is actually involved in facilitating that torture, while, in typical hypocritical fashion, posturing that they are against torture, but merely assuring that what goes on is "ethical". The facts should show you the "values" behind those "ethics": money and power.

Now, psychologists at the American Psychological Association are trying to
stop members from participating in this criminal process, just as members of
other health organizations have so prohibited their members.
The psychologists are fighting what seems like a losing battle. But the struggle
isn't finished. It is time to reach out to the public to exert their influence
on the insular APA leadership. What follows is a brief description of the
situation, followed by a direct action call for messages to be sent to key
figures at APA...

One year ago (!), Neil Altman, an APA psychologist, presented a resolution
that was non-binding, but called for APA to take a stand against psychologist
participation in foreign intelligence interrogations, after the passing of the
Military Commissions Act of 2006 made clear that cruel and unusual methods of
interrogation, if not outright torture, would be allowed, and that Bush would
decide what met Geneva treaty norms and what didn't.
APA leadership could have fast-tracked this resolution, but they sunk it under a thousand tons of bureaucratic verbiage and the full weight of the serpentine process that is approval of a proposal at APA.




The APA basically started to congenially take apart that resolution on petty grounds, such as stating this should be up to individual psychologists rather than taken as an action by the organization, or challenging the meaning of such terms as "foreign detainees" and "detention centers".

But most importantly, they defined "torture" in such a way that it did NOT include psychological torture, specifically such things as sexual humiliation, forced nudity, sensory deprivation, "moral" degradation (direct attack on victim's moral sensibilities), use of extreme temperatures, drugs and other injected materials (such as saline to induce uncontrolled urination and thus degradation), food and mental-stimulus deprivation, isolation, sleep deprivation, threat of torture and abuse, constant lights and loud noise, and much more...

These are the forms of psychological torture that the Bush administration finds acceptable and that the APA also condones, but in such a way as to appear to not condone. Abu Ghraib was no "rogue camp" and the scandal that ensued was not because this was an exception to the rule - no, this is psychological torture in action, your administration in action, and this is approved from the highest levels in government and the military, and of course, the Commander-in-Chief. This type of thing goes on daily right now at Gitmo. Facilitated by the APA.

Join Valtin, Stephen Soldz (who wrote an excellent article that gives important background about this issue), and others in this campaign to take action against torture by writing to the APA expressing your outrage that they participate in any way with the U.S. torture program now in place (the following is taken from Valtin's DailyKos diary):

We can help to stop this.

Here's How...
  • Write or call the APA:
    American Psychological Association 750 First Street, NE Washington, DC 20002-4242
  • (800) 374-2721 (202) 336-5500
    Write and call, now. Let them know how upset you are.
  • Send an email to the Public Affairs Office of the APA, expressing your outrage:
    public.affairs@apa.org
  • Phone the Ethics Office directly at (202) 336-5930 or use APA's toll free number (800) 374-2721, extension 5930, and give them a piece of your mind.
  • And finally, write to the President of the APA, Dr. Sharon Stephens Brehm. Be nice, be polite, but be firm (this is true for ALL communications). Dr. Brehm has a web page, Ask the President. Follow the link to leave an email message directly for her.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------
If we apply enough pressure, it might make the APA stand up and take notice. And, don't forget to write your congressman/congresswoman and senator, too! Even make others aware of the issue in a Letter to the Editor in your local newspaper. Or include this campaign on your blog.
WE CAN DO IT!
We don't have to be powerless. We aren't helpless. Write, call, email today.

I want to see APA inundated with thousands of messages saying "Stop torture. Stop psychologist participation in coercive interrogations. Support Dr. Altman's moratorium".
Together, we can prevail.

I hope that We the People will be more than just some words on an historical document. I hope our democracy will prevail over this newfound rush to militarism, torture, and absolute government, friendly to xenophobia, and antagonistic to human rights and civil liberties. In the heady days when this country was founded, those ideals were not considered "patriotic" or "American" per se.

They were human values that our nation's founders hoped would one day be shared by the whole world. Now we have reversed that idea and decided that such rights and liberties are not "human rights", a word maligned as "leftist" and "liberal" - read "against national security" - no, now these are for the chosen few, for "Americans only" and "like-minded people only", even going to far as to wish to deprive such rights to those one disagrees with.

We are not at war with Al-Qaeda per se any more. That is just a public prop to drum up public support for another agenda. We are at war with our own values, on every street, under every bed, inside every email, and behind every wizard-of-oz surveillance/omniscience campaign. The only thing saving us at times is the sheer incompetence of execution. But don't rely on that. When it comes to torture, the execution is pretty competent. They've succeeded in destroying many innocent people's lives in the name of national security. And they're not worried...

Machiavelli in hand, Rove leads the charge: The end justifies the means! But he never asks what, pray tell, is the end??? It seems rather obvious: money and power. National security has never been worse. Helped by torture??? Apparently someone forgot that we lasted as a nation for over 225 years in spite of abuses, not because of some infallible national security plan, not because of torture - we supposedly didn't do it - but because we were able to maintain our moral stature in the world. We had not only power, but respect.

Now that's gone.

Dear We the People: Please show your conscience and write to stop the promotion and support of torture!