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Now, I Am Become Death, The Destroyer of Worlds
The destructive force of Hurricane Bush continues to roll across the countryside, leaving in its wake devastation worthy of a Cormac McCarthy novel.
And still, a third of all Americans think this guy is doing well in his job. What's up with these people? Are they learned students of philosophy who crave the nihilism of their intellectual hero, Friedrich Nietzsche? Are they a secret army of Charles Lindbergh clones, trained to believe that fascism is pretty good stuff? Was Joseph McCarthy even more right than he knew, after all, and America is actually riddled with a hundred million spies devoted to its destruction?
Who knows. What is clear is that the literal and figurative stacks of bodies continue to pile up unabated. At this rate it is no small question as to who will be left around to bury the dead once the killing stops.
We do know that it won't be Tony Blair, however. He joins a long list of fools and other kinds of victims of George Bush's politics of global destruction, a machine so effective that 'scorched earth' has become 'scorched Earth', and now effectively ceases to function as a metaphor. (Thus, in addition to everything else he's done, Bush has given pundits everywhere (another) reason to hate him.)
Blair is in the first category of fool. Hardly an innocent, he bet everything on Bush's insane Mesopotamian adventure. How odd. Blair is not some Arkansas rube whose preacher got a few bucks from the GOP and convinced the congregants to vote for this great man of god. He is not even an average American, too busy to think enough about politics to penetrate a wall of Madison Avenue produced thirty-second spots designed precisely to prevent any such independent thought.
No, Blair got to see the cowboy himself, up close and personal. He got to take the measure of the man in ways you and I never will (and yet we all figured him out just fine, didn't we?). And then they sat down and got to business. Discussing Blair's ignominious departure, conservative columnist David Brooks did the only thing the right ever has been able to do in order to sell their ideas, even as those policies have now long been imploding before our very eyes. He lied. He wrote that the conventional wisdom on Blair - a guy full of promise and good intentions who tossed it all on a bad, but well-meaning, bet - was wrong. I guess Brooks never read the Downing Street Memos, though. When, in those documents, the curtain of deception (including Blair's own '45 minutes' to Doomsday farce) is parted, there stand the wizards, naked for all to see. And what we see is them acknowledging that their case for WMD is weak, that it is a ruse designed to sell a policy already decided upon, that the whole purpose of calling for UN inspections is so Saddam would reject them and provide a pretext for war, and that no plans whatsoever exist for what to do during the post-war occupation of Iraq.
It gets worse, too, but we're not allowed to know (yet). Last week two Brits were sentenced to jail for trying to leak a memo detailing more Bush-Blair conversations, these from 2004, as the wheels were even then every day coming off the wagon of their little Iraqi project. Unfortunately, we don't get to know what was in the document, but it was said by one person familiar with its contents to show beyond a doubt that George W. Bush is a "madman". So, no, actually, I don't feel the least bit sorry for Blair, who - better than almost anybody on either side of the Atlantic - knew the truth about Bush's character and conspired with him to lie to the entire world to facilitate a war of aggression. Given the resulting carnage, I'd say Blair is getting off real cheap with simply a ruined career and a failing grade in the history books. If there was any justice in the world, he would instead spend the rest of his life experiencing the misery he has brought to millions of other lives by casting his lot with the likes of George Bush in Iraq.
Ditto to the other world leaders, as well, who are probably less culpable than Blair, but only slightly so, many of whom have already felt the wrath of their angry publics. To date, elections in such strongly American allied countries as Germany, Italy, Spain, South Korea and just about everywhere in Latin America have turned into referenda on the Bush administration, with the universal outcome being "No, thanks", over and over again. John Howard, what in the world are you doing still in office? Now even the House of Saud has gone public with its discontents. At this point, how much of a stretch would it be for the Israeli government to effectively say, "Hey, love you guys and your whole boom-boom act, and appreciate all you do for us, but this Iraq thing is really messing up the neighborhood, so we're gonna have to act like we don't know you for a while, okay?"
The same thing is happening domestically. Bush once said that he would stick with his policy in Iraq until only Laura and Barney remained by his side. If you believe the tabloids, one of those two is getting ready to bolt as soon as they leave the White House (hint: it's the one that walketh upon two legs), and the resulting fervent minority of two seems just about where we might ultimately be headed, and also not a bad explanation of why. You know that the only way Barney gets his plate of Alpo is by nodding his head when the Scary Guy tells him to. Some days, though, even a rattling empty belly seems preferable to the garbage you have to swallow in order to get your food ration.
So it is with members of Congress. If you're George Bush, you know that the Sun and Moon just fell on your head when Trent Lott starts making noises about 'needing to see progress' in Iraq in order to maintain his current booking on the Andrea Doria. Or maybe you would know that if you weren't George Bush. It's hard to say whether the delegation of Congressional Republican co-conspirators who recently paid a call on the White House got their message across or not. Between Blair's demise, the Saudi demurral and the GOP's thumping, you gotta figure that if it was ever going to be done, that would do the trick.
Still, that remains a big if. Apart from the very real question of sanity, what is now happening is that the sick predators who chose this sociopath to be their standard-bearer are getting their own taste of what the rest of us have been subjected to these last six years while they were rolling about in their slop, reveling in their political good fortunes. Unable, by definition, to feel or care about the travails of others, Bush remains fixated on Bush. And that means staying in Iraq. It's crucial to leave it to the next president to 'lose' the war, so that Bush's butterfly-fragile ego does not have to go to the place where the cosmos proves definitively what his parents and his life experience have been insisting all along, but what he has desperately sought to avoid at all costs: He is a total loser, after all. A lifelong failure. A complete screw-up, blessed with a golden surname. What a price we've all paid, to save this man from himself.
I noticed, though, that the White House didn't turn the sixteen-inch guns of their battleship of personal destruction, the USS Karl Rove, on the GOP delegation from the Capitol, like they regularly have on those who previously made similar remarks, including Democrats, General Shinseki, Joseph Wilson and the entire nation of France. That could be an encouraging sign that the ugly reality is finally penetrating. On the other hand, it might simply mean that even Dick Cheney realizes that there is a limit to how absurd one can be, even when talking to the American public, and that dissing your own party leadership for being weak on a massively unpopular war when you're perched at twenty-eight percent is a maybe step too far. Maybe. You can bet they batted it around in Rove's office a few times. Of course, pretending to listen while appearing reasonable and actually having the war shut off on you are two different things, so we still don't know what the White House will do when their own people start defecting in large numbers to end the war.
And it is a question of when, not if. These GOP fools in Congress - once the very paragons of superciliousness and political savagery - are scrambling for their political lives, and it couldn't be happening to a more deserving lot. They now have two unpleasant alternatives to choose from as they ask the voters to keep their jobs in 2008. They can either admit they were wrong, or they can continue to be wrong. If that doesn't seem like a particularly fetching platform for securing victory in a political campaign, that's because it's not. This is a familiar dance, last seen during Watergate. One by one the Republicans abandon their president, as the violations of the Constitution, foreign countries, the American people and the truth are revealed, also one by one.
This president is already radioactive. Given the nature of Cheneyism, the fact that their depredations have gone completely unexamined by Congress for six years, the trajectory of an already hated war, and the president's current standing already hovering down where sunlight rarely penetrates and the strangest creatures prowl the ocean floor, it is nearly inconceivable that things will get better for these members of Congress between now and November 2008. The good news is that their own track records and the 'R' following their names will make it nearly impossible for most of these bottom-feeders to escape their well-deserved fates, even if the double-foot-shooting Democrats could somehow manage to put John Kerry on the ballot in every congressional district across America.
The even better news is that this is likely to be a more powerful effect than was Watergate. The GOP is in free fall, but with almost nowhere to go. North of Hattiesburg, at least, the public despises Republicans and a whole generation of young people have turned against the party, likely for life. It is only fitting that the reign of destruction wrought by this president should come back to destroy the very petri dish in which this virulent cancer was incubated. But now what? The party no longer has any real reason to exist, and virtually no ideological alternatives among its leadership. Will it become the new party of clean politics, small government, fiscal responsibility and foreign policy prudence, in loyal and genteel opposition to the Democrats? Let's just say that would be a bit of a hard sell given past performance. Will it stand for the little guys against all the malevolent corporate predators out there trying to rip them off? Um, that's a bit problematic, since those actors - what are described in polite society as 'campaign contributors' - happen to be the very owners of the party. Will Olympia Snowe inherit the mantle of Newt Gingrich, rally the other three 'moderates' still left in the GOP, and bring them back from the edge of extinction? I don't think so.
If you thought the first Republican presidential debate this season was a joke (with all those white men on stage, I was just waiting for someone to get it over with and burn a cross already), imagine what their convention will be like more than a year from now. Already they were pretending never to have heard of a certain Republican who just happens to be in the White House and just happens to have been to have been the most significant political figure of our time. (Significant with respect to impact either for good or bad, that is, in the same way that Time once made Adolf Hitler its Man of the Year. This week's Harper's cover story is less ambiguous: "Undoing Bush: How to Repair Eight Years of Sabotage, Bungling and Neglect" - though that title still doesn't get to the truly worst aspects of this administration). Anyhow, instead of Bush, at the debate it was all Reagan, all the time (which, of course, means Reagan The Movie, not the real thing). At the convention in Saint Paul next September, something tells me they're going to forego the glossy Hollywood video tribute to Bush that has become de rigeur at the end of an eight-year presidency. I'm wondering if they'll even let the guy show up. I'm wondering if they'll be trying so hard to distance themselves from him that confused viewers might think Bill Clinton is still in office, and still having a bit too much fun down there under the desk.
You can, in short, certainly add the GOP to the list of losers destroyed by this one-man wrecking machine, this force of nature, this human tsunami leveling everything in sight. Nowadays, as I survey the wreckage, I am reminded of nothing so much as Robert Oppenheimer's initial thoughts as he witnessed the birth of his creation. When that first atomic bomb exploded in the New Mexico desert that day in 1945, Oppenheimer recalled the words from the Hindu holy book, the Bhagavad Gita: "Now, I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds". I am finally coming to believe in Bush's whole rap about there being evil in the world, after all. It just isn't found quite where he might have guessed.
Just ask the Iraqis, whose country George Bush might as well have nuked for all the chaos, death and destruction he's caused. There are probably a million Iraqis now dead to serve the purposes of one man's lust for personal validation, which would make him a very big human hydrogen bomb, indeed, considering that Little Boy took out 'only' 140,000 at Hiroshima, by comparison. I guess it's fair to say that you could add Iraq to George's list of losers. And yet there we remain, even after the Iraqi parliament just voted for us to leave. That sounds a lot like democracy to me. Seems they've finally located that weapon of mass destruction that Bush was famously searching for under his desk. It was quite nearby, after all.
And then there's the American military, which is now broken and spent, and over 3,400 smaller in number than it once was, in addition to the wreckage of ten or twenty thousand gravely injured. And then, too, there are (or were) the good folks of places like the Gulf Coast or Greenburg, Kansas, who really could have used the help of the National Guard and its equipment, but, unfortunately, it seems to have had a more pressing engagement at the moment than saving American lives. Gotta keep our priorities straight, you know.
Let's also not forget the taxpayers who will be footing the bill for decades to come for what has been called the biggest foreign policy disaster in American history. If the war and all its fallout ultimately cost a trillion dollars (according to the most reliable estimate, it could be twice that amount), each American taxpayer will own better than a $7,000 chunk of that. That's before interest on the loans used to finance the war is added in, probably doubling the figure. So, what do you have to show for your fifteen or thirty thousand bucks? A shiny new car? A college education? Or a whole world that hates you because you finance the invasion of countries that pose not the least threat to you? When you put it that way, it almost seems like a bargain. No doubt Iraq has been the most efficient use of money in the entire history of American public diplomacy. With 6.5 billion people on the planet, I calculate that we're only spending about $154 per global citizen to engender the hatred of all of them. This is clearly the most successful project of the entire Bush administration. Perhaps we ought to double-down on this investment, and see if we can't alienate (get it?!) the entire galaxy!
The problem with fighting the wrong war somewhere is that you don't have anything left over to fight the right war somewhere else, so I guess we better add American security to the list of George W. (M. D.) Bush's casualties. If I hadn't already long ago lost my capacity to be shocked at the nature of political discourse in this country, I would be floored by the Republican presidential candidates who've joined Bush in asserting that getting Osama bin Laden is really no big priority. Wait, isn't this the guy who they told us did 9/11? Ah, but getting Saddam - who never attacked us and never even threatened to - well, now, that was crucial. Said the White Rabbit. To the Mad Hatter. At the tea party. With almost every bit of our land force capabilities tied down in Iraq, and with troop tours being extended to cover the breach, we're staring here at some bad news no matter which side of the looking glass you happen to be on. God help us if Mexico should ever decide it's payback time.
Which reminds us of yet another loser sacrificed on the altar of the Boy King's fragile ego, namely, American prestige and influence in the world. I generally find that people don't like it when you go off and invade foreign countries, especially when you base your justification for doing so on transparently fraudulent pretexts. People are just fussy that way, I guess. Then, when you set up gulags in the name of democracy (and do so following a century of toppling other people's democracies), and proceed to rip-up international law so you can torture people, it doesn't go over real well. But if you really want to engender some full-blown ridicule and revulsion, you need to fight a bogus war on terrorism, whilst harboring an admitted terrorist from extradition to the scene of his crime. Oh, and for the full effect, be sure to offer your (completely fabricated) fear that this terrorist would be tortured if extradited as your excuse for not returning him, all while you are kidnapping, torturing and murdering people, and humiliating entire cultures throughout the world in the name of fighting terrorism. (Who says they forgot the irony gene when designing Homo Americanus? Huh?) No, people don't like that. Just fussy that way.
In any case, the loss of American influence in the world is not entirely a bad thing. (Though the blowback in coming decades from creating so many angry friends and relatives of mangled, smoking piles of flesh that used to be human beings will be, and already is, according to our own intelligence agencies). While Norte Americanos haven't necessarily noticed their waning influence in the world, I can assure that Latin Americans have. After two centuries of being ground under the heel of the gringo's boot, they're partying with abandon now that they're finally free. Hugo Chávez never misses an opportunity to stand ten feet away, haunting and taunting the ferocious dog on the eight foot chain. So, hey, maybe this Iraq thing wasn't so bad after all, if it means that we can no longer invade Venezuela. Or Cuba. Or Bolivia. Or Nicaragua. Or Brazil. Or... Well, pretty much all those countries down there have chosen governments that blow off Washington's feeble snarl. Other than Mexico (formerly known as 'our backyard'), that is, where the folks who brought you Florida 2000 sent down and recreated their gift to democracy last year.
But I think we should strive to avoid being all doom and gloom here. There are winners, too, as a product of Bushism, and maybe it's time to accentuate the positive a little, eh? Take Osama, for example. He could be dead, but he's not! That's positive, right? I mean, as long as he's not a terrorist, or anything. As long as he's not plotting any attacks on America, or such. You know, why not let him be? And how about Iran? They seem like nice enough blokes over there, and they've really had a string of bad luck ever since 1953, when some foreign evildoers demolished their democracy by toppling the government in a violent coup in order to maintain the interests of foreign oil companies. You know, the same folks who also installed the dictatorial Shah and his hated secret police, the Savak (which then gave birth to the Ayatollah Khomeini and his equally repressive theocracy). You know, the same folks who gave weapons, intelligence and encouragement to Saddam Hussein, the "madman" who was "another Hitler", so that he could invade Iran and launch the ugliest war since World War II. Who could do such things? Certainly we never would, since we're both pro-democracy and anti-evildoer.
Given that very bumpy ride, I guess it's probably a good thing that Iran has come out the big winner from the Bush presidency. Maybe it's okay that they now rule Iraq as well as their own country. Maybe it's not so bad that we have financed their nuclear program with the doubling of oil prices that Mr. Bush's policies have facilitated. So what if they do love to chant "Death to America" over there, and refer to us as "The Great Satan". Probably they don't really mean it. Chances are, that nuke is intended for use against New Guinea, not New York. As long as we don't antagonize them with rattled sabers or pejoratives like "axis of evil", we should be okay.
Of course, the biggest winners of all are the nice people in the Chinese government. No, they don't bother with democracy, and their human rights record is atrocious. You might think that means we're fixin' to invade them, but I guess the smart people in the Bush administration have figured out that it would be better to export all our jobs to them instead. Must be a secret weapon of some sort, no doubt. Meanwhile, there they sit, like the good inscrutable Asians they are, slowly and quietly unfurling their plot to replace the US as the world's next hegemon. But what's the big deal about that? Who cares if we go from being the world's greatest power to a humiliated second-rate has-been? It's worked out okay for the French, hasn't it? God knows we've confused Mr. Hu, though, who undoubtedly is also asking what and why, as we frenetically expedite the process of our own demise. He's probably wondering if Bush isn't some kinda gift from Putin, who, in his fury at America thought about poisoning the entire country with polonium 210, but decided to arrange for the Bush presidency instead.
Heck of tally sheet, isn't it? The list of losers from the Great American Train Wreck of the Twenty-First Century include our allies, our security, our future security, our friends, our influence, our troops, our money, our prestige and our national unity. Heading the list of winners is Osama bin Laden, the Iranian mullahs, and our future rivals in China. In a way, even Saddam Hussein came out ahead, despite that he's not around to enjoy it.
There are a couple of other losers I forgot to mention, as well. Their names are Bush and Cheney. Yeah, it's been a great ride - Air Force One, lots of Moonie-like adoration, great food, etc. - and yeah, they'll probably make even more money than they've already got once it's over. (Though something tells me that the ghost-written memoir of a hated illiterate isn't exactly gonna move a lot of product on Amazon.) But they might find that their travel opportunities are somewhat limited, much like those of Henry Kissinger. And they might even find, if the right documents manage to surface, what the inside of a jail cell looks like. Or worse. I sure as hell wouldn't want to be on the lam from the enraged families of 3,400 dead troops when it's proven definitively that the whole war was a complete sham. (Of course, such documents already did surface with the publication of the Downing Street Memos, only to be ignored, but that was a different time. I doubt seriously that we've heard the last on those.)
So down they go, one by one, leaving us to wonder if perhaps their silly domino theory wasn't right after all. Just take out Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia and substitute regressivism, the GOP and Bush, and the damn thing actually works!
Hey, finally I've found a crackpot right-wing idea I can get behind!
David Michael Green is a professor of political science at Hofstra University in New York. He is delighted to receive readers' reactions to his articles (mailto:dmg@regressiveantidote.net), but regrets that time constraints do not always allow him to respond. More of his work can be found at his website, www.regressiveantidote.net.



41 Comments so far
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The Heritage Foundation and the Federalist Society are crypto-fascist organizations that have wide support in the Republican Party. It seems that we need to ask ourselves whether or not we subscribe to fascist conformity or not in the days ahead.
I recently read Cormac McCarthy's The Road in which the protagonist attributes the creation of the post-apocalyptic nightmare-world to religious zealots. It doesn't seem to matter what stripe they wear, their Manichean worldviews threaten the survival and happiness of all living things. Bush and Osama are equally dangerous.
All of congress that keeps backing Bush will share a piece of his eternal imfamy. They sold their souls. Bush should have never been let into a position where he could do so much harm.
Some people say that the democrats are a shoo in for the next election. I am serving my notice that I won't be voting for any democrat that wants to continue the genocide. I don't want Oligarchy lite. I want someone who will start to clean up the mess we call our government. I want to see secrets and secret agencies reduced to a minimum. If nobody knows what they are doing what good are they. I'm tired of faith based government. We should know what they are doing and keep an eye on them all the time.
David, I'm going to add 1) political and social dialectic, 2) government - judicial system, and 3) religion, to your list of losers.
The damage Bush & co. have caused (or exacerbated) the above will affect the world for a very long time.
JohnR,
Seems to me all those Middle Eastern religions are loony tunes. You know, Islam, Judism, Christianity. Seems like everywhere those religions take root, the blood begins to flow.
This article pretty well covers the entirety of the BushCo Fiasco. Unfortunately, while it's certainly possible to list all of this administrations egregious errors (although that would probably include virtually everything they have done in the past 6 years) it will be impossible to know all of the after effects that will reverberate through the future. Indeed, the future itself (as it relates to Mankind) is now seriously in doubt. It may turn out that these fools will takes us all with them.
Hmmmmm..."The fact that the ignorant sheeple of the United States allowed a piece of human garbage like George W. Bush to rule the country with impunity for two terms is indicative of the real predicament we're in. Bush is just a metaphor, a symbol of the underlying greed, racism, religious fanaticism, and outright fascism that all coelesced in this worthy freak. This burbling swamp is what propelled him into office and, when he's gone, it will still be there."
You mean you actually believe that the American people had anything to do with the election of 2000 or 2004? You don't buy that both elections were stollen?
The fact that the ignorant sheeple of the United States allowed a piece of human garbage like George W. Bush to rule the country with impunity for two terms is indicative of the real predicament we're in. Bush is just a metaphor, a symbol of the underlying greed, racism, religious fanaticism, and outright fascism that all coelesced in this worthy freak. This burbling swamp is what propelled him into office and, when he's gone, it will still be there.
"He is a total loser, after all. A lifelong failure. A complete screw-up, blessed with a golden surname. What a price we've all paid, to save this man from himself."
Sad...
Bush has certainly turned out to be a one-man wrecking ball. The funny thing is that prior to the 2000 presidential selection, I thought to myself, "He doesn't seem so bad." Boy, was I wrong! It's amazing how much destruction one man has been able to cause. Until now I never would have thought it possible.
What I would give to know what his father really thinks of him as a president.
It still astonishes me that a third of Americans still support this guy! What's even more astonishing is that his polices, such as the continuation of exporting of jobs to China (largely initiated by Clinton), have harmed his "base" the most, yet still they support him! What is wrong? Isn't American Idol elucidating its viewers on the economic facts?
Oh Dave, thank you for admitting your error (Not so bad? You must have been delusional!) and I can help you with what his Dad really thinks of him as president. He's horrified. Do you remember his sobbing about Jebb's loss of the Florida governorship? Well, that was WAY over-reacting. He was really telling us he is destraught at what Jr. has done! Don't let them fool you. You know when he professes such pride, he's really gritting his teeth and wishing he could publically apologize for abdicating his role as father and leaving all the child-rearing to Babs! Wonder what SHE thinks?!! Despite all the money and influence they couldn't raise a decent person. Geesh!
David -- alsolutely brilliant article. Thank you.
Purvis ames -- yours is the most insightful comment. Thank you.
cokids May 18th, 2007 3:11 pm
Of course both elections were stolen. I said "allowed". The American people have allowed a piece of human filth who subverted the electoral process, shredded the Constitution and launched an illegal war of aggression among many other crimes to remain in office. Unbelievably, he's still there today. What do you make of that? I don't say sheeple for nothing.
I read this in American Conservative Magazine, Fall 2004, http://www.amconmag.com/2004_11_08/cover1.html:
"The launching of an invasion against a country that posed no threat to the U.S., the doling out of war profits and concessions to politically favored corporations, the financing of the war by ballooning the deficit to be passed on to the nation's children, the ceaseless drive to cut taxes for those outside the middle class and working poor: it is as if Bush sought to resurrect every false 1960s-era left-wing cliché about predatory imperialism and turn it into administration policy...George W. Bush has come to embody a politics that is antithetical to almost any kind of thoughtful conservatism. "
Love it.
purvis..you are soooo right...which is why i've left the country
well, yes, it's good in a way. but i never believed that bush was running the show. he got to have the dubious honor of appearing to run this horror show scripted by cheney, rumsfeld, and the perle, wolfowitz crowd.
and the writer really misses it when he says:
'At this point, how much of a stretch would it be for the Israeli government to effectively say, "Hey, love you guys and your whole boom-boom act, and appreciate all you do for us, but this Iraq thing is really messing up the neighborhood, so we're gonna have to act like we don't know you for a while, okay?"'
did green miss israel's little rampage through lebanon last summer? does a country that does that think that the US is messing up the neighborhood? i have been reading that israel is pushing very hard for an attack against iran. no, definitely i do not believe they want the US to stop its wars of aggression.
cokids,
i agree with you. sheeple. that they are.
-----
I've been a subscriber to and have been reading David Michael Green's columns for some time now. And I must say that while I easily recognize in him a brilliant, talented, skillful writer, and then some, for the first time I do not trust Mr. Green.
I'm sorry, but D. M. Green lost cred with me when he wondered about Howard of Australia and the government of Israel, along with those monarchists of Saudi
Arabia. He penned a lengthy piece, analysis, and critique, but the overall result is quite superficial and lacking.
Millions of people (with or without credentials as lofty as those of Green's) have managed to connnect all of the countless "dots" since 9/11. (And from long before that infamous day.) We've long recognized that there is evil operating in this world, compliments of vile socio/psychopaths like Bush, his parents, Cheney, Howard, Blair, the Windsors, the Clintons, Sharon, Olmert, the monarchs of Saud, et al... Need I also specify the internationalist bankers and financiers, the Pope, the churches, synagogues, mosques, etc? Well, there.
We are neither confused nor simple-minded about who's who, and what's really what. There is a global undertaking to secure and control, once and for all, all of this planet's resources: animal, vegetable, and mineral. And in case you don't know, that includes us, the human animal!
It's not about Dems versus Repubs, nor Jews vs. Arabs, nor religion vs. religion. It's the whole kit n' kaboodle. It's life versus death. Life-enhancing, life-supporting, loving lifestyles versus death-enhancing ones. No diversions, divisions, or distractions, no matter how intelligently or eloquently presented are going to prevent me and many, many others from seeing the truth. the whole truth. and nothing but.
Dubya is a mere front man for neo-convicts the world over, no matter what political stripes they wear and no matter from whence they hail.
And to say that Dubya and Cheney are losers in all this? Ha. Ha. Hell, that's delusional at best.
Either Mr. Green needs to do some more, wayyy more head outta' the box, lateral thinking. Or he's being disingenuous, intentionally or otherwise.
We're all living in Medieval Times, for the most part. e.g. War lords. Drug lords. Judicial lords. Religious lords. Land lords... Yes, Medieval (end) Times.
For the love of LIFE, please wake up.
For the record, I don't wear tinfoil. But if you feel that what I wrote is mockworthy, knock yourself out. I can assure you 'tis your time you'll be a wasting, not mine. ;)
Peace!
DMG - love your viewpoint and your writing.
The only point I'd quibble with is to say that Bush is really just a front guy, kind of an Accidental President. He's an expression of - what an earlier commenter said - a very ugly aspect of the American character. He'd much rather be baseball commisioner.
More practically - Bush is a front guy for Cheney. Cheney is the man behind the curtain, smart enough to think like Dr Evil, world-domination-big, and smart enough to let a stooge like Bush front for him. As John Dean put it: "It is Dick Cheney's particular genius that George W Bush wakes up every morning believing that he is President of the United States".
Bush is just a face on the machine, and could be easily replaced (think Arnold Schwarzenegger, without the Constitutional ban on foreign born Presidents). Or, think Hillary Clinton even. I hear Rupert Murdoch has been friendly with her. It's the machine that must be destroyed, not its veneer du jour.
But apart from this quibble, everything you're saying is sadly true.
I enjoyed reading the article, and it is certainly right-on, but it's a bit of a downer.
I have not written too much here, but I do feel compelled occasionally (and this is one of those occasions) to write something that is kind of constructive.
So here goes again, and again I welcome any feedback.
We need to TOTALLY REVAMP OUR ELECTORAL SYSTEM.
Our elections are manipulated, and our elected officials are bought. Our government is too structurally crippled to solve any problem. In fact, it is structured to create more problems than it can solve.
This system has ALLOWED, and will continue to ALLOW, a George Bush presidency to happen.
We need to focus on the unsexy idea of election reform. It must be a radical reformation. And in the short term, we need to get people into office who consider that numero uno priority.
These are the goals:
-- Get rid of the electoral college wherein entire states go either blue or red with just a one-vote advantage. This leads to great perversity in campaigning and invites all kinds of subversions to the electoral process. Look at Florida in 2000, 2004 and Ohio in 2004.
-- Paper trail accountability. Hell, let's hand count ballots the way that Germany does. (Will employ alot of people in the process.)
-- Campaign Spending limits. Strict spending limits. Entirely funded publicly.
-- "Ads" not allowed. If you can say it in 30 seconds, it's a lie, or at least, misleading.
-- Real debates, not these monitored whatever-you-call them's.
... For starters. Many other reforms come to mind simply because they involve things that have been so much abused lately. These include:
-- Stopping the fulfillment of "civil service" posts with campaign loyalists and contributors (most of whom know nothing of the particular service they've in).
-- Disallow "Signing statements" added to legislation
-- Disallowing civil servants to join the cadre of corporate lobbyists. Currently a ban exists for a year. Should be extended for a lifetime. (Sorry Corporate America, know you can use the help.)
------------- Common Dreams Readers:
Can we be constructive here? If all we can do is feel sorry for ourselves, we are in a much worse state of affairs than even David Michael Greene so eloquently opines.
Spring has arrived for those of us in the Northern Hemisphere. Will a season of passionate/compassionate rebirth, renewal, and rebuilding ever come for our world?
I appreciate Dr. Green's essay very much. As usual he clarifies fuzzy and obscured realities, while raising many more questions. I also appreciate people's very passionate and astute responses to Green's blog. Restores more of my faith in humanity!
It is said that the following is a Chinese curse: "May you be born in interesting times."
If so, than we've been wicked cursed!
There's a vast absurdity in all this. All shot-through with terror, horror, rage, bewilderment, and gut-wrenching grief. Such destructiveness. It's more than enough to make one doubt the viability of the highly endangered species, Homo Sapiens Sapiens. (Is that designation a joke?)
But, perhaps, just perhaps, the whole insane multi-faceted drama that Dr. Green is addressing, is itself part of a larger production. Just as Justin Frank, in "Bush on the Couch" laid bare this psychiatrist's incisive grasp of the Bush's psyche, so Mike Ruppert's, Crossing the Rubicon, draws a detailed map suggesting that Afghanistan and Iraq were merely the first two targets within a much wider (and even darker) agenda/strategy. I have yet to see Ruppert's analysis refuted.
Beyond this viewpoint is the work of Alfred Webre. In articulating some dimensions of the new discipline known as "Exopolitics," he offers a glimpse of an even larger context for the events we've been discussing here.
( a biographical sketch of this unusual man can be found at:
http://peaceinspace.blogs.com/peaceinspaceorg/2007/04/alfred_lambremo.html. - or at Exopolitics.com)
Webre's understanding is that our struggling planet, and its steward – humanity – are currently players in an even greater drama. A very similar worldview informs the work of the late (and great) John Mack: If this is "Earth-School," then we are already deep in exams week. And we better cram fast...
Speaking of "unusual and gifted souls"… Jose Arguelles, in both The Mayan Factor, and Time and the Technosphere, presents additional material that is highly challenging to our world-picture. We are invited to re-vamp our understanding of the absurd, stuck position in which we - our country (and the world) - find ourselves.
This mathematically grounded vision, when allowed to provide context for the levels just mentioned, offers an even deeper sense of meaning - and real reason for optimism. (That is, unless our species takes the "Armageddon Bypass" first).
Empowering stuff when taken seriously and encountered with a wide-open mind… a "beginners mind."
To come full circle: Like Chinese Boxes - each of these contexts is nested within ever-greater Wholes. In my opinion such a holistic view of our predicament is well worth considering.
"Now, I Am Become Death, The Destroyer of Worlds"
I just skimmed the article. I'll read it later as I'm getting sleepy. But damn, I always wondered where Bathory got that kvlt lyric. :) \m/ Now I know. Sorry, metal fanboy moment.
That's one thing I like about this site. I always learn something.
All sadly true! But tragic is the massive support he had from all the head hangers of today! Look at the swamp not the monsters that emerge. Bush does not have a problem nor is he America's problem. Our nation has a problem, due to an obsolete political structure and the inability for effective reform. We will all be sad again in five years. Look at the money race going on right now among the "reformers", the "fixers". Rove and the American wrecking crew he worked for/with,(idealogical conservatives) have set the movement for the inexorable breakup clock of a united United States. Why are we immune from the same antagonisms we witness in other idealogical addicted populations? Our youth know- just ask. Money you got it or you don't. How do they know- well t.v. said so. America is awed by and worships the dollar vacuums- the Buffetets. This great "Christian" nation is ruled by the golden rule- you know gold rules. marc
pfutrell May 18th, 2007 11:08 pm wrote:
"– Disallow 'Signing statements' added to legislation"
more importantly - eliminate Executive Orders.
there's the blank cheque!
USA=Unlimited Sales of Arms
" The American government has always maintained the right of its citizens to ship arms to belligerants. President Washington, through his Secretary of State, Thomas Jefferson, and his Secretary of the Treasury, Alexander Hamilton, took this position when France protested against the sale of [American] arms to England in 1793; the answer being that 'the exporting of warlike instruments and military stores is not to be interfered with.' "
p160 - FEAR GOD and Take Your Own Part - Theodore Roosevelt - 1915
theorem: the right to bear arms doesn't make it right to bear arms.
(If we consider politics to be a play: what we, the audience, see as left- or rightwing is really the opposite. Any wonder that Perlovetc. entered stage left?)
great article...now where is that "right war somewhere else"? if only this war was prosecuted better it could have been the right one...say all those who thought this past few years was a good idea a few years ago. the current occupant went from 90+% to sub-30% approval rating...how many folks out there care to admit that they are part of that 60 or so %? with "right war somewhere else" comments there is a good chance that if you are not part of that 60% today you can be part of that 60% in the future. maybe it was an attempt at humor, but some things are just not funny. So, if a few planes fly into a few buildings in retaliation for our recent transgressions will that constitute the grounds for "the right war somewhere else"? guess we can all go back to sleep now...sweet dreams.
There was an ancient Jewish sect that believed the world was created by a god who was blind and insane. If they were around now I might convert.
Well, I substantially agree with David Michael Green's writings and yet I am struck that there does not seem to be more than a vague sense of unease among the general public. And I was struck (though I cannot say I listened to the republican candidate debates) that what the republicans seem to be saying is not an implicit denial of Bush policies in Iraq, Iran, the middle east, torture, the transfer of wealth to the wealthiest, roll-back of human rights and a minimum of health care for all. In fact, it seems to be more a promise to continue the course. Frankly, these are the issues I am waiting to hear Democrats talk about.
A brilliant article.
Very comforting also, especially from a non-American perspective.
Yes yes yes. Both the article and most of the comments show just how deep in doodoo we really are. Of course those of us old enuf have known this since we were three...
Because the past 60 years have been one long embarrassing failure to deal with the planet's problems, whether political, cultural, or environmental. And worse: crimes against life have been carried out in the US citizen's names, repeatedly.. (remember the radioactive bombs in Japan? , the endless carpet bombing and aerial herbicide in Vietnam? etc.,etc..etc.,etc..).The so-called "American people" have a long legacy of reprehensible crimes against humanity and the biosphere which is simply too large for us to bear as individuals. We haven't expiated what the Christians might call "social sin". Therefore, as US citizens, our daily functionality requires that we CEASE to feel, think and act as fully responsible beings, period. So we don't.
Additionally, no matter what quick fixes the "Americans"come up with, it is obvious that we as HUMANS have failed substantially, in similar ways. Humans ALWAYS exterminate species, destroy forests, ruin watersheds, and continually increase populations in the race to survive at any cost. We have created "culture", something we can be truly proud of, for its infinitely complex experiments in what life on earth can do, a thing of beauty and meaning. But we have not been able to successfully co-exist with the rest of the biosphere in a truly sustainable way. It is as a biologist that I make this harsh judgement.
The rise of weapons of mass destruction in the 19th Century was our first big wake-up call, but we failed to wake up. Missed the chance. Again, the rise of modern environmentalism around 1950 was another, but we haven't really listened. Oops, again.
Now, we got to get out of our boxes (in several ways) and smell the grass, love one another right now. While we declare a moratorium on the population orgy, and figure what we'll be eating when this thing finally comes down. Sorry, and have a nice day.
Like cornered rats, Bush, Cheney and their henchmen, desperately look for a way to reverse their political fortunes, and they have it !!!
All they need is another terrorist attack like 9/11, only much worse. A recent Washington Post article reported a Bush plan to evacuate "key" government personnel if and when Washington suffers a "decapitating" terrorist attack - a euphemism for some sort of nuclear device that would render D.C. uninhabitable.
Now think about it. If AlQaeda succeded in taking out Washington, whose interests would be served? Suddenly Bush and Cheney's corporate supporters would be rid of the one institution that prevents them from completely ruling the USA and World. Minus Congress and the Courts, Bush and Cheney would become dictators overnight.
Doesn't anyone remember Walter Karp's "Indispensable Enemies"? Osama bin Laden and AlQaeda are Bush's excuse for nullifying the Constitution and erasing the foundation of American democracy forever. All they need to do is the same thing they did on 9/11, politely step aside and let Osama's terrorists do their thing, then all opposition to Bush and Cheney's dictatorship would disappear, because the house of the people would be gone.
Are Bush and Cheney capable of doing such a thing? Look what they've done already and the answer is clear. The question is how soon? Certainly before the 2008 election.
Bush and Cheney cannot relinquish power because they know the evidence is accumulating for their impeachment. Thus, desperate men resort to desperate tactics. Better to impeach them now, if there is still time.
Here's a link to the above mentioned article, hope it works - nope, it doesn't work. Sorry.
I think it appeared May 9 in the Washington Post.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dym/content/article/2007/05/09/AR2007050902719
"Now, I Am Become Death, The Destroyer of Worlds..." Sadly, the title sayes it all.
I continue to be grateful for the sheer intelligence and incisive clarity of people's comments here.
entelechy - (gotta love your screen name!) - I wish I didn't agree, but in fact I do - with both the spirit and letter of your comments. This is why I'm forever mentioning the book, Crossing the Rubicon. If its data and analyis are basically correct - the book lends yet more urgency and intensity to our need - as a country and a world - to Wake Up.
I notice I've been thinking about the word "sheeple" used by purvis and others here. As a word it's both sad and funny.
My view is that it is our unconscious "authoritarian thought-habits" which are at the root of much of our cluelessness and gulliblity. Research into these traits was begun by Fromm and Adorno after WW2 to seek answers to the question, "How was the Holocaust possible?" To paraphrase 'Dr. Phil,' one of their questions regarding the German people was: "WHAT WERE YOU THINKIN'...???"
In recent years research into authoritarianism, particularly among conservatives, has been revitalized by Bob Altemeyer.
Unless we realize how deep our human conditioning in playing "the authoritarian game" really is, (among its fun attitudes --- "Follow the Leader"), we may as well continue to walk blithely and blindly down the yellow brick road to Hell.
Rejoice in one positive development which resulted from this 6 year fiasco: WE MIGHT NOT HAVE A BUSH AS PRESIDENT FOR AT LEAST 4 YEARS. It appears that Jeb won't be a candidate for 2008. The incubus of the Bush Family Dynasty has been temporarily thrown off!
pundit,
You assume there will be a 2008 election - but not if Bush & Company arrange for another more devastating terrorist attack and use it as an excuse to become dictators. They are desperate men trapped by their own treachery, and the only way out is more of the same, times 100. So, is there a legal process for when the White House is a nest of traitorous madmen? Would impeachment come in time to save the USA and the World? They should be arrested, but how?
PowerofLove,
I like your screen name too - so basic to our survival!
Most of the German people were complicit in Hitler's conquests. Only when he began to lose did they think otherwise, but it was much too late then. Most Americans too have supported Bush & Company as long as they seemed to be winning. So, are the people waking up in time? I hope so, but.........
Pundit,
Even though I view my own thoughts as catastrophizing, I also think the Blackwater, what Scahill calls the Praetoriun guard of the administration, and the sheer denial of this presidency could add up to a refusal to yield the Whitehouse in '08 especially if the republicans don't win it.
It's a thought I view as largely dramatic but I cannot quite shake it.
Ah, DMG you muse in the twilight that all will be well that ends well. Nothing is fixed. The will to power is strong and is not yet satisfied. If we live through this I would wish for Shakespeare to memorialize once again the harvest of this human propensity.
We all should remember and reflect that it is not just Americans that share the guilt of appeasing the will to power of the cabal that inflicts such misery today. The whole world appeased Bush and his shock and awe (blitzkrieg.) They do because they can and will, and nothing and no-one has yet been able to stop them.
purvis:
"This burbling swamp is what propelled him into office and, when he's gone, it will still be there."
I agree. But swamps nowadays have turned into expensive marshfront properties. I don't think the analogy fits.
"Single acts of tyranny may be ascribed to the accidental opinion of a day; but a series of oppressions, begun at a distinguished period and pursued unalterably through every change of ministers, too plainly prove a deliberate, systematic plan of reducing [a people] to slavery." --Thomas Jefferson: Rights of British America, 1774. (*) ME 1:193, Papers 1:125
"Prudence, indeed, will dictate that governments long established, should not be changed for light and transient causes; and, accordingly, all experience [has] shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer while evils are sufferable than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But, when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same object, evinces a design to reduce [the people] under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such government, and to provide new guards for their future security." --Thomas Jefferson: Declaration of Independence, 1776. ME 1:29, Papers 1:429
"An enlightened people, and an energetic public opinion... will control and enchain the aristocratic spirit of the government." --Thomas Jefferson to Chevalier de Ouis, 1814. ME 14:130
"The spirit of 1776 is not dead. It has only been slumbering. The body of the American people is substantially republican. But their virtuous feelings have been played on by some fact with more fiction; they have been the dupes of artful maneuvers, and made for a moment to be willing instruments in forging chains for themselves. But times and truth dissipated the delusion, and opened their eyes." --Thomas Jefferson to Thomas Lomax, 1799. ME 10:123
"The unquestionable republicanism of the American mind will break through the mist under which it has been clouded, and will oblige its agents to reform the principles and practices of their administration." --Thomas Jefferson to Elbridge Gerry, 1799. ME 10:83
"We are to guard against ourselves; not against ourselves as we are, but as we may be; for who can imagine what we may become under circumstances not now imaginable?" --Thomas Jefferson to Jedidiah Morse, 1822. ME 15:360
"[We] should look forward to a time, and that not a distant one, when corruption in this as in the country from which we derive our origin will have seized the heads of government and be spread by them through the body of the people; when they will purchase the voices of the people and make them pay the price. Human nature is the same on every side of the Atlantic and will be alike influenced by the same causes." --Thomas Jefferson: Notes on Virginia Q.XIII, 1782. ME 2:164
"[When] corruption.. has prevailed in those offices [of]... government and [has] so familiarized itself as that men otherwise honest could look on it without horror,... [then we must] be alive to the suppression of this odious practice and... bring to punishment and brand with eternal disgrace every man guilty of it, whatever be his station." --Thomas Jefferson to W. C. C. Claiborne, 1804. (*)
"Lethargy [is] the forerunner of death to the public liberty." --Thomas Jefferson to William Stephens Smith, 1787.
"Let the eye of vigilance never be closed." --Thomas Jefferson to Spencer Roane, 1821. ME 15:326
"Our government is now taking so steady a course as to show by what road it will pass to destruction; to wit: by consolidation first and then corruption, its necessary consequence. The engine of consolidation will be the Federal judiciary; the two other branches the corrupting and corrupted instruments." --Thomas Jefferson to Nathaniel Macon, 1821. ME 15:341
"In every government on earth is some trace of human weakness, some germ of corruption and degeneracy, which cunning will discover, and wickedness insensibly open, cultivate and improve." --Thomas Jefferson: Notes on Virginia Q.XIV, 1782. ME 2:207
"I have never been able to conceive how any rational being could propose happiness to himself from the exercise of power over others." --Thomas Jefferson to A. L. C. Destutt de Tracy, 1811. ME 13:18
"Force [is] the vital principle and immediate parent of despotism." --Thomas Jefferson: 1st Inaugural, 1801. ME 3:321
"There is a natural aristocracy among men. The grounds of this are virtue and talents... There is also an artificial aristocracy founded on wealth and birth, without either virtue or talents; for with these it would belong to the first class... The artificial aristocracy is a mischievous ingredient in government, and provision should be made to prevent its ascendency." --Thomas Jefferson to John Adams, 1813. ME 13:396
"How soon the labor of men would make a paradise of the whole earth, were it not for misgovernment, and a diversion of all his energies from their proper object -- the happiness of man -- to the selfish interest of kings, nobles, and priests." --Thomas Jefferson to Ellen W. Coolidge, 1825. ME 18:341
If the Congress will not impeach the criminals in the White House, then the Constitution gives the people the right to do it themselves however they can.
Hey, progressive reformers, CHECKMATE!
The Right has been quietly stacking the high courts with Federalist Society members for well over a decade. How long do you think it'll take right-wing courts to judge all our reforms unconstitutional? Anything fair and just? Unconstitutional.
Someone somehow has to expose the Federalist Society to masses of Americans as the dangerous pack of fascists they are so everybody understands we can still be stymied -possibly for decades-even if Congress and the Executive branches turn over. If Bush gets another Supreme Court nomination it can't go like the last two 'cause that'll mean, at the least, stalemate.
Bigphatjay: thank you for the important, inspiring Jefferson quotes. Power of Love: thank you for broadening the discusssion to allow for mystical paradigms suggestive of new possibilities for mankind. The authoritarian aspect is a direct byproduct of the power of patriarchal religion to maintain a chokehold on human purpose and possibility for the past 2 millennia. Jose Arguelles' material dovetails with material from American indigenous seers such as Sun Bear and Mary Summer Rain, which in turn dovetails with astrological prophecy and those of persons such as Ruth Montgomery and Edgar Cayce. When I see common threads of truth coming from diverse sources, I pay attention. What the Christians call END TIMES is a major paradigm shift, a/k/a "The Aquarian Conspiracy" by Marilyn Ferguson (I believe, the author to be). Clearly, whether on account of the growing population relative to earth mother's paroxysms of overload, or the loss of oil, or the upping of the ante of violence thanks in part to the US escalating conflicts by inciting "terrorism" and/or selling weapons, we cannot maintain the present pattern. Be it collapse or "the great turning," OTHER will emerge; but how much suffering equates with the laboring to become process is yet to be seen... and sadly, felt. I believe the dawn of the new millennia might have held a different set of outcomes had intelligent, inspired leadership been at the wheel. Instead, we received through a number of false sleights of political hand, probably the most diabolical, damaging and deranged political operatives possible... they have set the clock back on sane ecological stewardship, initiatives towards global cooperation, fair values in wages, education, health care, etc. As many writers have chronicled, the sins of this administration are almost too much for sane, moral minds to bear. CHANGE will come... and we are part of the transition. Imagine if Gore had been at the wheel, maybe the past 6 years would have focused on earnest investments in alternative fuel sources, rather than imperial war to maintain the last barrels of a dying resource, and one that's proven the death of so many, so tragically.