
WAR
CRIMINAL n.
A person commiting any of
various crimes,
such as genocide or the mistreatment of
prisoners of war, committed during a war
and considered in violation of the conventions
of warfare.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If
I had seen this article before the election... I
would have optimistically posted it on my
connection page, with the hope that anyone
reading it would not vote for these
people... I always maintained a positive
view of the American population... BEFORE THE
ELECTION... NAIVE, NAIVE, NAIVE... I'll bet
the Bush voters would have rationalized this
CLAIMING IT WAS SOME SORT OF LIBERAL PROPAGANDA
even though Rumsfield's words came out of his own
mouth... no hear-say here! Thank you BUSH
voters... this is what you did for America!!!
Carolyn
OPEN FORUM
Supporting Our
Troops?
The defense secretary we have
Lynn
Woolsey
Friday,
December 17, 2004
Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld has finally gone too far. Confronted
last week by a Guardsman who described soldiers
rummaging through landfills for protective metal
for their vehicles, Rumsfeld's cavalier reply was
unconscionable: "As you know, you go to war
with the Army you have ... not the Army you might
want or wish to have at a later time."
As if Rumsfeld were
dealt a poor hand and had no choice but to play
it. Whose Army is this if not Rumsfeld's and
George W. Bush's? They chose this war and its
timing. For Rumsfeld to claim that we were caught
flat-footed, forced to march into Baghdad without
time to get our act together and assemble
"the Army you want" is beyond
disingenuous.
On the other hand, maybe
we were caught flat-footed, thanks to the
scandalous incompetence of Rumsfeld and the war
planners. This was, after all, the team that
believed in "Mission Accomplished" and
pooh-poohed warnings of a ruthless insurgency.
This was the team that told us grateful Iraqis in
tears would be tossing flowers at our soldiers'
feet. If conservative columnist Pat Robertson is
to be believed, President Bush himself did not
even think there would be any U.S. casualties.
Under this fantasy scenario, you wouldn't need a
whole lot of protective armor.
But this only shows how
little they knew or cared, and it certainly
doesn't let them off the hook. The magnitude of
the war has been apparent for some time. Even if
we were low on armored metal in the summer of
2003, has no one seen fit to do something about
it in the subsequent year and a half? It's not as
if Congress hasn't responded each time the Bush
administration has rattled its tin cup for Iraq
funds. We have provided more than enough
resources for Rumsfeld to build the Army he
wants.
It's a question of will
and priorities. It's hard to escape the
conclusion that this is the Army they want -- one
whose front-line personnel are forced to wait in
line for lifesaving safety equipment (in some
cases paying for it out of their own pockets)
because a missile defense shield and no-bid
Halliburton contracts had to come first.
Progressives have been
unfairly badgered about how we can oppose the
Iraq war and still support the troops. We have
consistently pushed for better protection for our
troops and their families as well as support when
they return home. Now it turns out that, in the
most literal way imaginable, the architects of
this war have themselves failed to support the
troops. "Support the troops," coming
from Rumsfeld and company, appears to be nothing
more than demagoguery.
Rumsfeld also defended
the government's armored-vehicle negligence by
arguing that it was logistically impossible to
meet the need. But after the Pentagon's only
armored Humvee supplier contradicted Rumsfeld by
saying it was ready and prepared to increase
production, the Army finally increased its order.
Still, they have a lot of catching up to do.
According to Time Magazine, the Army needs 35
times more of these vehicles than were written
into the Iraq war plan. Young Americans are
needlessly dying for this mistake.
And despite all this,
Secretary Rumsfeld is one of only a handful of
Cabinet members whom the President has asked to
stay. It makes you wonder: How bad were the
secretaries who were allowed to leave?
We can only hope that
the protective-armor problem will now be
adequately addressed. It remains to be seen
whether a president who played flight-suit
dress-up for a photo op truly grasps the serious
matter of our soldiers' true outfitting needs.
It's time that the men
and women risking their lives in Iraq were given
the respect they deserve. Not another dollar
should be spent on antiquated Cold War weapons
systems until every soldier has the very best in
safety gear. And we should be looking at other
innovative ways to armor our troops. Eliminating
the tax loophole that allows Americans to write
off the purchase of a Humvee would be a good
start, with the money being diverted to our
soldiers in the field. On American highways,
Humvees are nothing but material trophies,
despoiling the environment and providing their
owners with a tax break. In Iraq where Humvees
are critical, the government has yet to find a
way to properly outfit the vehicles. Is there a
better example of bad public policy?
Rep. Lynn Woolsey,
D-Petaluma, represents Marin and Sonoma counties
in Congress.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
AND
HERE, VERY SADLY, IS ANOTHER OUTRAGE THE BUSH
VOTERS CAN THANK THEMSELVES FOR!!! Carolyn
"Un-embedded
journalist tells the real news from Iraq"
Editor's note: After covering
post-9/11 politics and the run-up to the Iraq War
for a weekly in Alaska, Dahr Jamail saved his
money to cover the war from the front lines.
How
long have you been reporting on Iraq, and what
brought you there?
DJ:
I have spent 6 of the last 12 months in Iraq. As
I mentioned, what brought me here was the nearly
total failure of the US 'mainstream' media to
show the truth of this illegal invasion and
occupation. How it affected the Iraqis, as well
as US soldiers. Overall, they just weren't doing
their job, and this has grown even worse.
I
had done all the usual actions of attempting to
speak up and effect change at home-calling and
writing Senators/Congresspeople, attending
teach-ins, spreading information. After
watching the worldwide demonstrations on February
15, 2003 be brushed aside as a "focus
group," I knew then that the minds of the
American public had been misled by the corporate
media who mindlessly supported the objectives of
the Bush regime, and reporting the true effects
of the invasion/occupation on the Iraqi people
and US soldiers was what I needed to do.
What
is it like being one of the only
"unembedded" journalists operating in
the country? Do you fear for your safety, and
what have you done to ensure your safety? Whom do
you fear more, random kidnappers or the American
Military? How do you manage to move through Iraqi
society now when it appears that, in the wake of
Margaret Hassan's murder, all Westerners are
viable targets? And on that same note, what do
the Iraqis think of the kidnappings, murders, and
beheadings?
It's
tough. Working in this environment of media
repression and danger is always an uphill battle.
Blinking electricity, car bombs, kidnappings are
the playing field. I constantly monitor my safety
factor and those who work with me. I grew a
beard, dress like locals, and only travel around
covertly with one interpreter in a beat up car. I
minimize my time on the street, while at the same
time spending enough there to get the Iraqis
reactions to what unfolds here each day.
My
greatest concern is the reaction of my own
government. I'm reporting information that the
Bush regime wants kept under wraps. I fear
reprisal from both the government and military
far, far more than being kidnapped or blown up by
a car bomb.
Iraqis
are of course shocked and outraged by the
beheadings and kidnappings of people like
Margaret Hassan. So many also believe it was a
CIA/Mossad plot to keep aid organizations and
journalists out of Iraq in order to give the
military and corporations here a free hand to
continue to dis-assemble and sell of the country.
On
Nov 18 in one of your dispatches you wrote,
"Journalists are increasingly being detained
and threatened by the U.S.-installed interim
government in Iraq. Media have been stopped
particularly from covering recent horrific events
in Fallujah." What are the predominant
differences between your reporting and that of
the corporate media and embedded reporters, or
that of Iraqi and Muslim journalists? In other
words, what does each group do with the same
pieces of information? Do you feel you have a
freer hand by being "unembedded"? Have
you or anyone you know been intimidated or
harassed in any way?
Myself
and most Arab and western independent journalists
here show the costs of war. Report the massacres,
the slaughter, the dead and wounded kids,
disaster that this occupation truly is for the
Iraqi people. Report on the low morale of most
soldiers here, report on how doctors now state
openly that due to lack of funds and help from
the US-backed Ministry of Health, they feel it is
worse now than during the sanctions.
I
do feel I have more freedom because I am
"unembedded." I'm flying under the
mainstream radar of censorship.
I
have been attacked from some mainstream sources
and pundits. Fox propaganda channel invited me on
after I accurately reported the sniping of
ambulances, medical workers and civilians in
Fallujah last April...I declined the set up
because I didn't have a desire to have my
character assassinated.
My
website has taken some attacks by hackers...but
so far we've managed the onslaught. I receive
some hate mail via my site, and have received one
death threat...so far.
The
US Corporate media consistently characterizes the
Iraqi resistance as "foreign terrorists and
former Ba'athist insurgents". In your
experience, is this an accurate portrayal? If
not, why?
This
is propaganda of the worst kind. Most Iraqis
refer to the Iraqi Resistance as
"patriots." Which of course most of
them are-they are, especially in Fallujah,
primarily composed of people who simply are
resisting the occupation of their country by a
foreign power. They are people who have had
family members killed, detained, tortured and
humiliated by the illegal occupiers of their
shattered country.
Calling
them "foreign terrorists" and
"Ba'athist insurgents" is simply a lie.
While there are small elements of these, they are
distinctly different from the Iraqi Resistance,
who are now supported by, very conservatively at
least 80% of the population here.
There
are terrorist elements here, but that is because
the borders of Iraq have been left wide open
since the invasion. These did not exist in Iraq
before.
The
Bush regime like to refer to anyone who does not
support their ideology and plans for global
domination as a "terrorist."
Here,
these fighters in the Iraqi Resistance are
referred to as freedom fighters, holy warriors
and patriots.
We
rarely see any substantial imagery coming out of
Iraq in the US corporate media. What does Iraq
look like now? What aren't the people in the
United States seeing, and what do you feel they
should be seeing?
(GET
READY FOR THESE ANSWERS, MY FRIENDS!
OMG!)
The
devastation. The massive suffering and
devastation of the people and their country.
Baghdad remains in shambles 19 months into this
illegal occupation. Bombed buildings sit as
insulting reminders of unbroken promises of
reconstruction.
Bullet
ridden mosques with blood stained carpets inside
where worshippers, unarmed, have been slaughtered
by soldiers.
Entire
families living on the street. 70% unemployment
with no hope of this changing. Chaotic, clogged
streets of Baghdad and 5 mile long petrol lines
in this oil rich country.
Engineers
and doctors, unemployed, driving their cars as a
taxi to try to feed their families.
The
seething anger in the eyes of people on the
streets as US patrols rumble past.
Iraqis
now cheering when another US patrol or base is
attacked. Dancing on the burning US military
hardware.
Dead
and maimed US soldiers. The wounded screaming and
writhing in agony. Their shattered families.
The
mass graves of innocent Fallujans after the utter
destruction of their city.
Children
deformed by Depleted Uranium exposure lying in
shattered hospitals, suffering from lack of
treatment, or even pain medications.
Dead,
rotting bodies in the streets of Fallujah of
women and children being eaten by dogs and cats
because the military did not allow relief teams
into the city for nearly two weeks.
What
are the sentiments of the Iraqis you have spoken
with towards the Americans? Is there any good
will left? Was there any to begin with? What do
they think of Alawi, the pending
"elections", the continued occupation,
the American-trained Iraqi security forces? Do
they have any hope or belief that the Americans
will leave, or are they thinking this will be a
generation-long occupation?
There
was support by most Iraqis for the removal of
Saddam Hussein. But that started to ebb quickly
on in the occupation as people watched family
members killed, detained, tortured and humiliated
by the occupation forces.
Then
there was Abu Ghraib. I cannot stress enough how
devastating this was to US credibility in Iraq,
and the entire Middle East.
Throw
on top of that the April siege of Fallujah,
nearly complete lack of reconstruction,
importation of foreign workers to do jobs Iraqis
are far more qualified for, the installation of
an illegal interim government, and you have a
complete PR disaster for the US here.
Any
credibility for the occupiers, and I doubt there
was much to speak of, after the destruction of
Fallujah has been lost. Iraqis I speak with are
infuriated at the US government. While they are
well aware that what is most likely the majority
of people in the US being in opposition to the
Bush regime, they believe the US government and
those who support it are guilty of war crimes of
the worst kind. I see rage, grief, and the desire
for revenge on a daily basis here.
They
hate Allawi. They have no respect for him or any
other of the puppets in the US-installed interim
government, because they don't see how any
self-respecting person would allow themselves to
be a puppet of the US in this illegal, brutal
endeavor.
They
are well aware that he is an exile who has been
linked with the CIA and British intel for a long,
long time. He and the rest of the interim
government are views as thieves, rapists and US
pawns. They are utterly loathed, as everyone here
knows these people do not have the interests of
the Iraqi people in mind.
The
elections are viewed as a joke. Most here now
believe there is no way they can be held in an
honest, transparent and truly democratic way.
Most are also too afraid to vote. I've heard
people say things like, "The Americans won't
even allow a legitimate election in their own
country, so why would they want to have one
here!"
The
Iraqi "security" forces, being the
police and national guard, are viewed by most as
surrogates of the US military. They are viewed as
collaborators and traitors by most. While people
understand many of these forces join out of
desperation because there are no jobs, they
remain loathed, along with the foreign occupation
forces. It doesn't help when many of the police
are actively involved in organized crime.
Lastly,
the occupation is viewed as endless. Iraqis know
there are already 4 permanent military bases
here, and more soldiers coming. There is little
hope amongst those I talk with about this topic
that the occupation will end.
We've
read substantive reports recently that over
100,000 innocent Iraqi civilians have been killed
since the war began. What is your take on this
report, and what have you seen that either
supports or contradicts it? Is the US military
indiscriminately targeting civilians, or are they
just hopelessly inept, or is it something
in-between?
I
think this report has understated the death toll.
From what I've seen during my six months here, it
is increasingly difficult to find a family here
who has not had at least one member killed by
either the military or criminal activity. Entire
neighborhoods in Fallujah have been bombed into
rubble. Houses with entire families have been
incinerated and blown to pieces.
The
random gunfire of soldiers nearly every time a
patrol or convoy is attacked almost always
results in civilian deaths. Keep in mind there
are now over 100 attacks per day on US forces in
occupied Iraq.
Then
we have the infrastructure-people dying from lack
of food, water borne diseases, inadequate health
care...the list is longer than any of us know.
I
think the military is killing so many civilians
for several reasons. Primarily, because they have
been put in an untenable situation by their
Commander in Chief-that is, a no-win guerilla war
against an enemy who now has the massive support
of the populace. Thus, anyone, anytime could be
an attacker. So they are shooting first and
asking questions later because they are scared to
death.
They
are using a conventional military to fight a
guerilla war-and just as in Vietnam, it is a
disaster and utter failure.
Then
there are the soldiers who have completely
dehumanized Iraqis, and I've spoken with some who
seem to actually enjoy killing them.
Of
course it doesn't help that this is sanctioned
and encouraged by the US government, and that
blinding religious ideology appears to have
filtered down into many of the soldiers here.
"You are either with us, or you are against
us." Iraq is now full of fields of death.
There is carnage in the streets everyday in
Baghdad, as well as other cities throughout much
of the country.
There
has been a lot of speculation about the role of
oil in the occupation. Americans were told that
Iraqi oil revenues would pay for the war and
reconstruction, but there is no oil coming out of
Iraq after more than 18 months. Certain
journalists and activists ranging from Jim Marrs
to Mike Ruppert to Peter Camejo have all stated,
in some form or other, that this was never the
intention, that the idea was to first remove
Iraqi oil from the world market, thereby driving
up oil prices (the profits mainly landing in the
pockets of the Saudis), and eventually to co-opt
the oil supply to sell to China and India as
their energy demands skyrocket. What have you
seen in regards to oil activity? Also, Iraq
Coalition Casualty (http://icasualties.org/oif/default.aspx) was
the only outlet to report on a series of
coordinated attacks on the Iraqi oil
infrastructure all this week. This has gone
completely unreported in the US corporate media.
Do you believe this lack of reporting is
intentional and who do you think is sabotaging
the infrastructure?
Iraq
is still importing all of its gasoline. And from
what I know, they are exporting all of the oil
from here, as well as that which is refined in
Iraq, which isn't much at all, if any.
I
think the lack of reporting on the sabotaging is
akin to the lack of reporting that there are
nearly 100 attacks per day on US soldiers, or
lack of reporting of lack of infrastructure, etc.
I think it all falls under the umbrella of the
mainstream media's successful efforts to
whitewash the Iraq catastrophe for the Bush
administration.
It
looks as though it is the resistance who are
doing the sabotaging. An open question though,
regarding what you asked, is why is there not
better protection of the oil infrastructure?
We
have conflicting reports in the US about the Shia
and Sunni putting aside their historical
differences to team up against the Americans. Do
you see this happening, and what do you believe
the eventual outcome will be. US policy makers
claim that an American withdrawal would only
result in a widescale civil war between these two
factions and the Kurds in the north. Do you
believe this will be the case? Are the Iraqis in
a situation now where they are dammed any way
they turn?
I
do see this happening. During the siege of Najaf,
collections for aid at Sunni mosques were
organized, as well as resistance fighters from
Fallujah who provided guns and supplies to the
Mehdi Army there. During the siege of Fallujah
last April, Shia weighed heavily in donating aid,
and participated in a non-violent action that
pushed supplies into Fallujah through a US
military cordon.
The
Shia/Sunni rift is largely a CIA generated myth.
There are countless tribes and marriages alike
that are both Shia/Sunni. There are mosques here
where they pray together.
There
is the possibility of war if the Kurds go
independent, but the more likely possibility of
that war would be Turkey invading Kurdistan
before any Shia/Sunni action would occur
regarding this.
Remember
the Arab proverb; "Me against my brother. Me
and my brother against my cousin. Me, my brother
and cousin against the stranger."
The
Iraqis are in a situation where they are damned
as long as the US continues to occupy and subvert
their country, as they have been doing.
It
is critically important that Americans begin to
understand the psyche of the Iraqi resistance.
What is really going on in Fallujah, Ramadi,
Mosul, and Baghdad? Is this a legitimate,
coordinated uprising against the occupation, or
is it a defensive response to the US escalation
of the war? Or both? Considering that the US
claims they have opened a front to "take the
battle to Al Qaeda", do you see any evidence
of an Al Qaeda presence, or the presence of
"foreign fighters streaming in from the
Syrian border" as is also reported here?
The
resistance is complex because it has so many
facets. Parts of it are simply Iraqis who don't
want their country to be occupied. Iraqis who
have had family members killed, tortured or
humiliated by the military...so they are exacting
revenge. Other parts are more organized, where
individual cells are operating in coordinated
attacks with other cells, but they remain largely
decentralized. This is why the conventional US
army will never defeat it. Because the resistance
has no face, no leader, no fixed organization.
It
is really both a defensive reaction to the
occupiers, but also is going more on the
offensive as the occupation continues. As one
Iraqi man old me once, "The invasion was
America's war on Iraq. Now we are seeing the
Iraqi's war against the Americans."
I
have yet to see any evidence or meet any Iraqi
who has seen evidence of Al-Qaeda here. There are
certainly other fighters entering Iraq from
different countries, but they are a relatively
small number. When we say "foreign
fighters" here, we must recall that every
Iraqi I've spoken with views the occupiers as the
foreign fighters, and not any other Arab who is
coming here to fight in the resistance. Most
Iraqis I speak with view these Arab fighters as
brothers, and the occupiers as the "foreign
fighters."
Have
you had much contact with American troops, and if
so, what are they saying, and what is your
impression of them? Do you support NBC reporter
Kevin Sites' decision to film and report on the
murder of an unarmed and wounded Iraqi prisoner
this week? Do you believe this was a relatively
"isolated" incident, or did these guys
just get caught?
I've
had a fair amount, but not so much this trip. I
make it a point to avoid them now since they are
such constant targets. They are being attacked at
least 100 times a day as of late. But when I
interacted with them my last two trips I found
most of them to be quite scared, and morale
depended on how long they'd been here. The newer
folks were keeping a stiff upper lip and staying
on message. The folks who'd been here 6, 9 or 12
months were angry, aiming their guns at everyone,
and sometimes high on drugs. Not to
generalize-not all were like this. But I saw many
who were, and it reminded me of everything I've
read about what happened to the psyche of US
soldiers in Vietnam.
I
do support Kevin Sites' decision to film what he
did of the execution of the old, unarmed Iraqi
man in the mosque. 100% I support this. People
need to see that this is what is occurring
here-and this is NOT an isolated incident. Nearly
every refugee from Fallujah I've interviewed has
spoken of mass executions, tanks rolling over the
wounded in the streets, bodies being thrown in
the Euphrates by the military, and other
atrocities.
The
footage of the execution in the mosque is akin to
the photos that came out of Abu Ghraib. They are
only the tip of the iceberg of atrocities that
have been occurring here from the beginning.
Atrocities that are occurring right now.
Indeed,
those soldiers just got caught. This is not news,
however-because we've even had military
commanders come out in the media and admit that
they gave orders to soldiers to shoot anything
that moved in Fallujah. What we will see in
Fallujah is that it has been a genocide.
Lastly,
what do you see happening in both the immediate
and distant future in Iraq? How long do you plan
to stay? Do you believe you will still safely be
able to report the truth to us when so much of
your reporting flies in the face of the so-called
"official" reports and media blackout?
Do you envision an even greater information
clamp-down, or do you think Independent reporting
is going to become a stronger force as the US
digs itself into a deeper and deeper hole?
I
see more bloodshed and chaos. Sending more troops
will only speed up the spiral here; increase the
fighting. I see a continuing degradation of the
infrastructure and failing of the occupation. It
has already failed. It had failed even before the
April siege of Fallujah and the Abu Ghraib
scandal (which is ongoing). The
real question is, how many more Iraqis and
soldiers die before the US admits to its colossal
failure, makes reparations for the countless war
crimes that have been committed and pulls out.
The
long term-that depends on how long the US stays
here. It is rare when I speak with an
Iraqi who wants the US to stay-they say,
"Civil war? It can't possibly be worse than
this-so the US should leave. Then we'd at least
have the chance to run our own country."
Another
man pointed out that if there were a civil war,
no Shia or Kurdish attack on Fallujah could ever
possibly compare to the devastation the US
military has caused there. I think he makes a
good point.
I
am concerned about my safety, of course. This
is the most dangerous place in the world for a
journalist to be, especially those of us who are
reporting the reality of what is occurring here.
I have concerns of reprisal from the military and
my government-because they don't like to have the
facts get out. I've consistently been a minority
voice with my reporting in Iraq-which has led
many to discount my reports and call me biased.
Yet
I have consistently been shown to be accurate, as
have the other independents here. An
example would be that several of us were
reporting on Abu Ghraib months before the
mainstream decided to do their job and run the
story. And at the end of the day, those of us who
have been reporting that this occupation failed
months ago, and the vast, vast majority of Iraqis
oppose the occupation and support the resistance,
will end up again being proven right. But I'm
afraid with the media blackout in the mainstream
of the US, in general, being as stunningly
effective as it has been, I think this is going
to be a long time before this comes to light. But
it will.
I
do envision a deepening of the clampdown we are
now experiencing. We're watching this in the US
media now, with NPR having even jumped
on the propaganda bandwagon.
However,
as with repression of any kind, the more the
"powers that be" attempt to muzzle
independent media and the truth, the more they
create a growing, powerful, diverse entity that
finds new and creative ways to work here.
For
example, the closing of the Al-Jazeera office
here has simply caused their journalists to go
underground and decentralize, making it
impossible for the government to control them. In
this way, the repression naturally creates a
smarter, more diverse and creative resistance in
the form of increased independent reportage.
In
the end, people know the truth when they see it.
I taste this by mail I get from my readers-those
who read many sources and thank me for reporting
the truth, as well as those who support the
occupation who send hate mail and try to tell me
I'm reporting from Idaho and making everything
up. Their ugly reactions
indicate that they prefer not to know the
truth-that their government has deceived a large
percentage of the American people into supporting
an illegal invasion that has cost at least
100,000 Iraqi lives, as well as those of over
1,200 US soldiers. Many people would rather lash
out to protect their denial rather than accepting
responsibility for supporting such atrocities.
In
the end, the truth will come out, no matter how
intense the repression becomes. And in the end,
those in America who support this occupation will
eventually see that virtually the majority of
people in every other country on the planet
oppose the American agenda in Iraq.
It
is only a matter of time.
Dahr
Jamail's Iraq Dispatches can be found at: http://dahrjamailiraq.com
Charles
Shaw is Editor-in-Chief of Newtopia Magazine.
Images From The War in
Iraq :: Fallujah Photos
View
these photographs of horror and sadness, with
caution, and only if you want to see what war is
really like. Carolyn
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The
vanquished know war. They see
through the empty jingoism of those who use the
abstract words of glory, honor, and patriotism to
mask the cries of the wounded, the senseless
killing, war profiteering, and chest-pounding
grief. They know the lies the victors often do
not acknowledge, the lies covered up in stately
war memorials and mythic war narratives, filled
with stories of courage and comradeship. They
know the lies that permeate the thick,
self-important memoirs by amoral statesmen who
make wars but do not know war. The vanquished
know the essence of war-death. They grasp that
war is necrophilia. They see that war is a state
of almost pure sin with its goals of hatred and
destruction. They know how war fosters
alienation, leads inevitably to nihilism, and is
a turning away from the sanctity and preservation
of life. All other narratives about war too
easily fall prey to the allure and seductiveness
of violence, as well as the attraction of the
godlike power that comes with the license to kill
with impunity. By Chris
Hedges
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I
periodically like to float around in the vastness
of the Internet, reading mostly progressive items
but on occasion some of the articles written by
the unenlightened conservative branch (speaking
of branches, I think they might have a couple of
them missing in their family trees... just my
opinion) Well if you can stomach this
website please click below... TALK ABOUT
RATIONALIZING! Carolyn, a blue from the
South.
CLICK
THE (red) RANT
PS:
They even have the shameless, insolent, gall, to
refer to progressive thinkers as a fifth
column...(there's a link on their page) THESE
FOLKS SHOULD LOOK IN THE MIRROR ... FIFTH COLUMN
BELONGS TO THEM WHEN IT COMES TO DEGRADING
LIBERTY!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
MICHAL MOORE'S LATEST
LETTER TO FOLKS LIKE US... (PROGRESSIVE
BLUES)
Thanks Judy C, I love
MM too. Carolyn
It's Time
to Stop Being Hit...a letter from Michael Moore
Monday, December 13th, 2004
Dear Friends,
It is no
surprise that the Republicans are sore winners.
They have spent the better part of the past month
beating their chests, threatening to send to
Siberia any Republican who doesnt toe the
line (poor Arlen Specter), and promising
everything short of martial law if the Democrats
dont do what they are told.
Whats
worse is to watch the pathetic sight of the DLC
(the conservative, pro-corporate group of
Democrats) apologizing for being Democrats and
promising to purge the party of the
likes of, well, all of US! Their comments are so
hilarious and really not even worth recognizing
but the media is paying so much attention to
them, I thought it might be worth doing a little
reality check.
The most people
the DLC is able to get out to an event of theirs
is about 200 at their annual dinner (where you
have to pay thousands of dollars to get in).
Contrast this
with the following:
*Total members
of Move On: More than 2,000,000
*Total Attendance at Vote for Change Concerts: An
estimated 280,000
*Total Union Members in U.S.: Around 16,000,000
*Total Number of People Who Have Seen
Fahrenheit 9/11: Over 50 million
*Total number of you reading this: Perhaps 10
million or more
The days of
trying to move the Democratic Party to the right
are over. We lost a very close election (a
one-state difference) by running the #1 liberal
in the Senate. Not bad. The country is shifting
in our direction, not to the right. But the
country was attacked and people were scared. They
were manipulated with fear. And America has never
thrown a sitting president out during wartime.
Thats the facts. Oh, and our candidate
could have run a better campaign (but well
have that discussion another day).
In the meantime,
while we reflect on what went wrong, I would like
to pass on to you an essay that a friend who
works with abuse victims sent to me. It was
written by a woman who has spent years working as
an advocate for victims of domestic abuse and she
sees many parallels between her work and the
reaction of many Democrats to last months
election. Her name is Mel Giles and here is what
she had to say
Watch
Dan Rather apologize for not getting his
facts straight, humiliated before the eyes of
America, voluntarily undermining his
credibility and career of over thirty years.
Observe Donna Brazille squirm as she is
ridiculed by Bay Buchanan, and pronounced
irrelevant and nearly non-existent. Listen as
Donna and Nancy Pelosi and Senator Charles
Schumer take to the airwaves saying that they
have to go back to the drawing board and
learn from their mistakes and try to be
better, more likable, more appealing, have a
stronger message, speak to morality. Watch
them awkwardly quote the bible, trying to
speak the new language of
America. Surf the blogs, and read the
comments of dismayed, discombobulated,
confused individuals trying to figure out
what they did wrong. Hear the cacophony of
voices, crying out, "Why did they beat
me?"
And then
ask anyone who has ever worked in a domestic
violence shelter if they have heard this
before.
They
will tell you: Every single day.
The
answer is quite simple. They beat us because
they are abusers. We can call it
hate. We can call it fear. We can say it is
unfair. But we are looped into the cycle of
violence, and we need to start calling the
dominating side what they are: abusive. And we need to
recognize that we are the victims of verbal,
mental, and even, in the case of Iraq,
physical violence.
As
victims we can't stop asking ourselves what
we did wrong. We can't seem to grasp that
they will keep hitting us and beating us as
long as we keep sticking around and asking
ourselves what we are doing to deserve the
beating.
Listen
to George Bush say that the will of God
excuses his behavior. Listen, as he refuses
to take responsibility, or express remorse,
or even once, admit a mistake. Watch him
strut, and tell us that he will only work
with those who agree with him, and that each
of us is only allowed one question (soon, it
will be none at all; abusers hit hard when
questioned; the press corps can tell you
that). See him surround himself with only
those who pledge oaths of allegiance. Hear
him tell us that if we will only listen and
do as he says and agree with his every
utterance, all will go well for us (it won't;
we will never be worthy).

And
watch the Democratic Party leadership walk on
eggshells, try to meet him, please him, wash
the windows better, get out that spot,
distance themselves from gays and civil
rights. See the Democrats cry for the
attention and affection and approval of the
President and his followers. Watch us squirm.
Watch us descend into a world of
crazy-making, where logic does not work and
the other side tells us we are nuts when we
rely on facts. A world where, worst of all,
we begin to believe we are crazy.
How to
break free? Again, the answer is quite
simple.
First,
you must admit you are a victim. Then, you
must declare the state of affairs
unacceptable. Next, you must promise to
protect yourself and everyone around you that
is being victimized. You don't do this by
responding to their demands, or becoming more
like them, or engaging in logical
conversation, or trying to persuade them that
you are right. You also don't do this by
going catatonic and resigned, by closing up
your ears and eyes and covering your head and
submitting to the blows, figuring its over
faster and hurts less if you don't resist and
fight back.
Instead,
you walk away. You find other folks like
yourself, 57 million of them, who are
hurting, broken, and beating themselves up.
You tell them what you've learned, and that
you aren't going to take it anymore. You
stand tall, with 57 million people at your
side and behind you, and you look right into
the eyes of the abuser and you tell him to go
to hell. Then you walk out the door, taking
the kids and gays and minorities with you,
and you start a new life. The new life is
hard. But it's better than the abuse.
We have
a mandate to be as radical and liberal and
steadfast as we need to be. The progressive
beliefs and social justice we stand for, our
core, must not be altered. We are 57 million
strong. We are building from the bottom up.
We are meeting, on the net, in church
basements, at work, in small groups, and
right now, we are crying, because we are
trying to break free and we don't know how.
Any
battered woman in America, any oppressed
person around the globe who has defied her
oppressor will tell you this: There is
nothing wrong with you. You are in good
company. You are safe. You are not alone. You
are strong. You must change only one thing:
Stop responding to the abuser.
Don't
let him dictate the terms or frame the debate
(he'll win, not because he's right, but
because force works). Sure, we can build a
better grassroots campaign, cultivate and
raise up better leaders, reform the election
system to make it fail-proof, stick to our
message, learn from the strategy of the other
side. But we absolutely must dispense with
the notion that we are weak, godless,
cowardly, disorganized, crazy, too liberal,
naive, amoral, "loose, irrelevant,
outmoded, stupid and soon to be extinct. We
have the mandate of the world to back us, and
the legacy of oppressed people throughout
history.
Even if
you do everything right, they'll hit you
anyway. Look at the poor souls who voted for
this nonsense. They are working for six
dollars an hour if they are working at all,
their children are dying overseas and
suffering from lack of health care and a
depleted environment and a shoddy education.
And they
don't even know they are being hit. 
How true. And
that is our challenge over the next couple of
years; to hold out our hand to those being hit
the hardest and help them leave behind a party
that only seeks to keep beating them, their
children, and the kid next door whos on his
way to Iraq.
Yours, Michael
Moore
www.michaelmoore.com
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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