Operation Freedom From Iraqis
When all else fails, those pious Americans who conceived and directed the Iraq war fall back on moral self-congratulation: at least we brought liberty and democracy to an oppressed people. But that last-ditch rationalization has now become America's sorriest self-delusion in this tragedy.
However wholeheartedly we disposed of their horrific dictator, the Iraqis were always pawns on the geopolitical chessboard rather than actual people in the administration's reckless bet to "transform" the Middle East. From "Stuff happens!" on, nearly every aspect of Washington policy in Iraq exuded contempt for the beneficiaries of our supposed munificence. Now this animus is completely out of the closet. Without Donald Rumsfeld and Paul Wolfowitz to kick around anymore, the war's dead-enders are pinning the fiasco on the Iraqis themselves. Our government abhors them almost as much as the Lou Dobbs spear carriers loathe those swarming "aliens" from Mexico.
Iraqis are clamoring to get out of Iraq. Two million have fled so far and nearly two million more have been displaced within the country. (That's a total of some 15 percent of the population.) Save the Children reported this month that Iraq's child-survival rate is falling faster than any other nation's. One Iraqi in eight is killed by illness or violence by the age of 5. Yet for all the words President Bush has lavished on Darfur and AIDS in Africa, there has been a deadly silence from him about what's happening in the country he gave "God's gift of freedom."
It's easy to see why. To admit that Iraqis are voting with their feet is to concede that American policy is in ruins. A "secure" Iraq is a mirage, and, worse, those who can afford to leave are the very professionals who might have helped build one. Thus the president says nothing about Iraq's humanitarian crisis, the worst in the Middle East since 1948, much as he tried to hide the American death toll in Iraq by keeping the troops' coffins off-camera and staying away from military funerals.
But his silence about Iraq's mass exodus is not merely another instance of deceptive White House P.R.; it's part of a policy with a huge human cost. The easiest way to keep the Iraqi plight out of sight, after all, is to prevent Iraqis from coming to America. And so we do, except for stray Shiites needed to remind us of purple fingers at State of the Union time or to frame the president in Rose Garden photo ops.
Since the 2003 invasion, America has given only 466 Iraqis asylum. Sweden, which was not in the coalition of the willing, plans to admit 25,000 Iraqis this year alone. Our State Department, goaded by January hearings conducted by Ted Kennedy, says it will raise the number for this year to 7,000 (a figure that, small as it is, may be more administration propaganda). A bill passed by Congress this month will add another piddling 500, all interpreters.
In reality, more than 5,000 interpreters worked for the Americans. So did tens of thousands of drivers and security guards who also, in Senator Kennedy's phrase, have "an assassin's bull's-eye on their backs" because they served the occupying government and its contractors over the past four-plus years. How we feel about these Iraqis was made naked by one of the administration's most fervent hawks, the former United Nations ambassador John Bolton, speaking to The Times Magazine this month. He claimed that the Iraqi refugee problem had "absolutely nothing to do" with Saddam's overthrow: "Our obligation was to give them new institutions and provide security. We have fulfilled that obligation. I don't think we have an obligation to compensate for the hardships of war."
Actually, we haven't fulfilled the obligation of giving them functioning institutions and security. One of the many reasons we didn't was that L. Paul Bremer's provisional authority staffed the Green Zone with unqualified but well-connected Republican hacks who, in some cases, were hired after they expressed their opposition to Roe v. Wade. The administration is nothing if not consistent in its employment practices. The assistant secretary in charge of refugees at the State Department now, Ellen Sauerbrey, is a twice-defeated Republican candidate for governor of Maryland with no experience in humanitarian crises but a hefty résumé in anti-abortion politics. She is to Iraqis seeking rescue what Brownie was to Katrina victims stranded in the Superdome.
Ms. Sauerbrey's official line on Iraqi refugees, delivered to Scott Pelley of "60 Minutes" in March, is that most of them "really want to go home." The administration excuse for keeping Iraqis out of America is national security: we have to vet every prospective immigrant for terrorist ties. But many of those with the most urgent cases for resettlement here were vetted already, when the American government and its various Halliburton subsidiaries asked them to risk their lives by hiring them in the first place. For those whose loyalties can no longer be vouched for, there is the contrasting lesson of Vietnam. Julia Taft, the official in charge of refugees in the Ford administration, reminded Mr. Pelley that 131,000 Vietnamese were resettled in America within eight months of the fall of Saigon, despite loud, Dobbs-like opposition at the time. In the past seven months, the total number of Iraqis admitted to America was 69.
The diplomat Richard Holbrooke, whose career began during the Vietnam War, told me that security worries then were addressed by a vetting process carried out in safe, preliminary asylum camps for refugees set up beyond Vietnam's borders in Asia. But as Mr. Holbrooke also points out in the current Foreign Affairs magazine, the real forerunner to American treatment of Iraqi refugees isn't that war in any case, but World War II. That's when an anti-Semitic assistant secretary of state, Breckinridge Long, tirelessly obstructed the visa process to prevent Jews from obtaining sanctuary in America, not even filling the available slots under existing quotas. As many as 75,000 such refugees were turned away before the Germans cut off exit visas to Jews in late 1941, according to Howard Sachar's "History of the Jews in America."
Like the Jews, Iraqis are useful scapegoats. This month Mr. Bremer declared that the real culprits for his disastrous 2003 decision to cleanse Iraq of Baathist officials were unnamed Iraqi politicians who "broadened the decree's impact far beyond our original design." The Republican leader in the Senate, Mitch McConnell, is chastising the Iraqis for being unable "to do anything they promised."
The new White House policy, as Zbigniew Brzezinski has joked, is "blame and run." It started to take shape just before the midterm elections last fall, when Mr. Rumsfeld wrote a memo (propitiously leaked after his defenestration) suggesting that the Iraqis might "have to pull up their socks, step up and take responsibility for their country." By January, Mr. Bush was saying that "the Iraqi people owe the American people a huge debt of gratitude" and wondering aloud "whether or not there is a gratitude level that's significant enough in Iraq." In February, one of the war's leading neocon cheerleaders among the Beltway punditocracy lowered the boom. "Iraq is their country," Charles Krauthammer wrote. "We midwifed their freedom. They chose civil war." Bill O'Reilly and others now echo this cry.
The message is clear enough: These ungrateful losers deserve everything that's coming to them. The Iraqis hear us and are returning the compliment. Whether Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki is mocking American demands for timelines and benchmarks, or the Iraqi Parliament is setting its own timeline for American withdrawal even while flaunting its vacation schedule, Iraq's nominal government is saying it's fed up. The American-Iraqi shotgun marriage of convenience, midwifed by disastrous Bush foreign policy, has disintegrated into the marriage from hell.
While the world waits for the White House and Congress to negotiate the separation agreement, the damage to the innocent family members caught in the cross-fire is only getting worse. Despite Mr. Bush's May 10 claim that "the number of sectarian murders has dropped substantially" since the surge began, The Washington Post reported on Thursday that the number of such murders is going up. For the Americans, the cost is no less dear. Casualty figures confirm that the past six months have been the deadliest yet for our troops.
While it seems but a dim memory now, once upon a time some Iraqis did greet the Americans as liberators. Today, in fact, it is just such Iraqis — not the local Iraqi insurgents the president conflates with Osama bin Laden's Qaeda in Pakistan — who do want to follow us home. That we are slamming the door in their faces tells you all you need to know about the real morality beneath all the professed good intentions of Operation Iraqi Freedom. Though the war's godfathers saw themselves as ridding the world of another Hitler, their legacy includes a humanitarian catastrophe that will need its own Raoul Wallenbergs and Oskar Schindlers if lives are to be saved.
Copyright 2007 The New York Times
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54 Comments so far
Show AllKucinich 'gets it', thats why he's minimalized by our hideously corrupt establishment with their filthy nasty bloody hands:
Rep. Dennis J. Kucinich: "Privatizing Iraq's Oil is Theft!"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=26Lr17usifg&eurl=
http://kucinich.us/
The Bush admin solicited public support by linking Saddam to nuclear weapons and terrorism. Why and how does the U.S. determine who has the right to nucs? This country has exported more nuclear energy than any other entity. I'm surprised that people do not see the subtle continuation of the Cold War, with the U.S., France and Britain on one side, and China and Russia on the other. People should not forget also, that the majority of Americans re-elected Bush in 2004. The re-election is a foreshadowing that the American populace is doomed to support future immoral foreign policies for which the government will apologize for 50 years later, as the historic trend dictates. Would we be outraged if the war in Iraq lasted only one week, with no U.S. casualties?
There is a special hot corner in Hell reserved for Godless neocon filth
"Sophistry to suggest one cannot criticize without offering a solution."
This was my point too.
Who is the analyst you speak of annac? Frank?
Before one can offer a "solution" one must analyze.
I was responding to I guess it was "Frank" who criticized Rich for criticizing without offering a solution. Sophistry to suggest one cannot criticize without offering a solution.
Oh well, one comment:
Frank Rich and a couple of other people at the Times, most
notably Paul Krugman and Bob Herbert do much more than Frank and the like deserve.
Frank doesn't know that analysts analyze, but he knows what really matters, namely, that Rich is a Jew.
Sick, sick, sick, sick, sick, sick
I am not sure I understand Bolin.
To ask analysts to design the future, even more to "call to arms" is absurd and ignorant. Usually they are not good at it (e.g. Marx), and it's not their job. Obviously, Frank doesn't know that analysts ... well ... analyze.
Yes, there are also very ugly overtones in Frank's comments, but I'll ignore them.
baska meet annac, annac meet baska...
The criticism offered that in discussion or debate one simply MUST offer a "solution" to any given issue, is specious.
Frank offers one helluva perspective on the Big Picture of the mess this country is in.
To ignore the mess and pretend it does not exist is foolish.
Eat a Peach for Peace
REPLY TO FRANK 1569
UH-HUH - CALLING ATTENTION TO THE BUSH ADMINISTRATION'S HYPOCRITICAL FAILURE TO SUPPORT IRAQI REFUGEES IS WRONG: BECAUSE FRANK RICH DOES NOT "SUGGES[T]...POTENTIAL SOLUTIONS" OR MAKE A "'CALL TO ACTION'"
frank1569 May 27th, 2007 1:42 pm
"What if we progressives started doing more than just penning really insightful essays about stuff we already know?....What if 50 million "liberals" flooded the State Department with Iraqi visa sponsorship applications...?"
What if you lead the way, "progressive" Frank? Instead of slacking off with do-nothing armchair "progressive" suggestions? Advance thanks for including the date you'll be leading the charge in your forthcoming "'call to action'".
Which of course you'll post here. Won't you, Frank?
REPLY TO FRANK 1569
UH-HUH - CALLING ATTENTION TO THE BUSH ADMINISTRATION'S HYPOCRITICAL FAILURE TO SUPPORT IRAQI REFUGEES IS WRONG: BECAUSE FRANK RICH DOES NOT "SUGGES[T]...POTENTIAL SOLUTIONS" OR MAKE A "'CALL TO ACTION'"
frank1569 May 27th, 2007 1:42 pm
"Just point out the problem, collect a check."
Right, Frank 1569 - obviously Frank Rich is in it for the money. Way to combat right-leaning cynicism re politics, progressive guy!
REPLY TO FRANK 1569
UH-HUH - CALLING ATTENTION TO THE BUSH ADMINISTRATION'S HYPOCRITICAL FAILURE TO SUPPORT IRAQI REFUGEES IS WRONG: BECAUSE FRANK RICH DOES NOT "SUGGES[T]...POTENTIAL SOLUTIONS" OR MAKE A "'CALL TO ACTION'"
frank1569 May 27th, 2007 1:42 pm
"What if we progressives started doing more than just penning really insightful essays about stuff we already know?"
What if NYT readers are not progressives, and don't know what you claim you already knew, Frank?
And what if "progressive" critics of NYT editorial writers started doing more than just criticizing them?
Maybe Congress should do what Montgomery Meigs did the family of Robert E Lee, when he founded a national cemetery in their front garden in vengeance for Lee's siding with the South in the Civil War. Perhaps the bodies of all US soldiers killed in Iraq should be buried on Bush's front lawn, and all Iraqi refugees should be settled in a new city with the Crawford ranch at its centre. Like Mike just commented - old Ma Bush hated the throught of Louisians being allowed to live in Texas after hurricane Katrina.
Bush and his gang of neocon thugs need urgently to be frogmarched to the International Criminal Court and sentenced to life in prison. Now that Wolfowitz has been exposed for his hypocrisy and kicked out of the World Bank, I would hope that a courageous prosecutor somewhere would issue an Interpol warrant on the guy. He will be the first rogue on the dock. And how about that rat's arse Bolton cavalierly dismissing the hell he and his cohorts have rained upon Iraq! Number two on the dock! Iraqis should be grateful to America? FOR WHAT?????
Frank Rich's point about the reconstruction of Iraq being plagued by incompetence due to political cronies is an issue that needs much more exposure. We basically FEMA-ed Iraq at great expense to US taxpayers. And then the connection to anti abortion Christianity is bizarre. And where would these same ultra right wing Christians be on an adopt an Iraqi program? Or they need to build a "little Baghdad in Crawford. Wasn't is Bush's mom that was so thrilled to have Katrina victims in Texas. Maybe she could get thrilled again.
Now I understand. The Iraqis are the ones who need to withdraw from Iraq-Nam. If they'd just go away, there'd be peace and prosperity. How foolish of me not to have seen where the real trouble was.
:)
Let's give those folks a big Texas welcome.
Crawford, Texas is the perfect location for an Iraqi asylum camp.
All we need is for the media to honestly represent what is going on over there. If Americans were forced to confront the devastation, if they knew their tax dollars were being spent dropping white phosphorous weapons on women and children, if they had to confront the skyrocketing cancer cases, this would stop. But conservative owned media will not allow reality to be shown. And the fact is , for many Americans, they just prefer not to see it or think about it. And the profiteers of the war adore the out of sight out of mind attitude, because it allows them to run unchecked, and they are.
As one of the 5 plus billion 'lesser breeds' this makes my blood boil. For far too long have we suffered having the jackboots of the 'master race' grinding our faces , bodies and souls into the dirt.
First it was Slavery and Colonialism -which was an affliction we had to endure for hundreds of years.
Then in a stroke of supreme irony the post -War period (one that paid only lip-service to the notion of 'Peace') gave rise to among many others: the obscenity of the Katanga conflict and the utter ,unmitigated horrors of the Vietnam War . (A war where more bomb-tonnage was dropped than during the entire Second World War .And one in which the worst form of chemical warfare was unleashed : Agent Orange, that wreaked untold environmental damage - and what is worse ,destroyed the DNA of countless Vietnamese -ensuring the birth of stunted and grotesque infants far far into the future.)
And now we are 'treated' to the horrendous tragedy of Iraq - a war fought for the sole and express purpose of filling the corporate coffers of the US and the rest of the 'coalition of the willing'.
A pox on your and your 'values' . Especially the 'freedoms' you so blithely hold out to us 'lesser breeds' - like Mars-Bars and Candies to starving shildren.
After all that has happened ,can you blame us for wishing that a fate far worse than Sodom and Gomorrah's befalls the entire Western world. And that each of you meet an end far more grisly and excruciating than the deaths you've so cavalierly meted out to many of us .
There has to be a limit to our forbearance .We are but human.
We need a simple "symbol" of our outrage and openly display it so others may see that we ARE the majority! I propose (and display) the inverted American flag. There are 3 large stickers on my car and one on the side of my briefcase. For those of us who served in the military, it means one thing: "situation desperate, need assistance". What a better reflection of our insane country?
For those of you who might see this as "disrespectful" of the flag, what could possibly be moreso than the current state of affairs in our country? Millions of us spent a great deal of our lives in the U.S. military supposedly defending against external enemies, only to fall from within (which was predicted by many wise souls). If is far past time to stand up, each of us in our own way, and say, "ENOUGH!!". Wear flag lapel pins upside down, fly your flag that way, buy car stickers (which peel off) and hand them out to your friends. We MUST become visible!
In addition, a few friends and I have been going to our local courthouse grounds each Sunday from 2-3 pm. Not to protest, no bullhorns or placards; just fellow Americans sharing time on public property, perhaps having a picnic.
DO SOMETHING CONCRETE! Let the world know where YOU stand!
"Knowing ignorance is strength; ignoring knowldege is sickness" Lao Tzu
Ellen Sauerbrey responsible for imigration at the State Department needs to be FIRED!!!! The media should keep focusing on her so that there is a real surge to get her kicked out.Thanks Fran Rich for starting the ball rolling.
There are US soldiers who wanted to rescue their own Iraqi translators by offering to sponsor and vouch for them and allowing them to live in their own apartment in the US and rescue them from slaughter of retaliation for working with the US soldiers.
Ellen Sauerbrey refused to give a visa.
She is really a nasty peson. No wonder she lost two elections and also no wonder she is one of those hypocritical women who want to prevent others from making up their own mind about abortion. No sense of freedom for others while talking a blue streak about freedom. Call the White House Comment Line at 202-456-1111 and complain about the witch who is making things a lot worse - no winning of hearts and minds- the Iraqis must sense that we are simply afraid of them and loose more respect for US people. We need to win hearts and minds. Those Iraqis who come over here and are welcome would phone home and tell the Iraqis that we helped them. That would result in more peace. Instead the State department is run by a coward who does not trust any Iraqi who might be a terrorist. Well they are out there translating for our US troops and our US troops have trusted them - so what else is there? It is again so illogicalas Al Gore sais it is an assault on reason. One thing, Ellen Sauerbrey and other "faith based" [people don't have any faith, are afraid of their own instincts and are cowards.
the solution lies in impeachment for both bush and cheney.
Kivals: It doesn't have to be either... it CAN be both. Dr. Zimmerman: Apt and important quotes for THIS weekend/holiday.
kivals
the greater tragedy is not either/or, it is both, plus the fact that we have let them.
Is it the greater tragedy that our government has been taken over by the most ruthless American imperialists in a century or that they are the most incompetent imperialists of all time?
"I renounce war. I renounce war because of what it does to our own men...I renounce war because of what it compels us to do to our enemies...I renounce war for its consequences, for the lies it lives on and propagates, for the undying hatreds it arouses, for the dictatorships it puts in place of democracy, for the starvation that stalks after it. I renounce war and never again, directly or indirectly, will I sanction or support another."- DICK SHEPPARD
On this Decoration Day perhaps we can find one more friend to share this commitment.
that the US attacked iraq to bring them democracy was a totally transparent lie. the US went to "shock and awe" Iraq into submission, so that it could have hegemony in this oil area.
and also so that israel could feel safer once iraq was destroyed.
but democracy sounds so nice and this neocon administration could count on the establishment press to sell this lie to its readers. just one more lie in a whole history of lies that our fine press has sold its readers. the last thing that is wanted is an informed citizenry
"Yet another excellent essay from Mr. Rich - and another essay lacking even the suggestion of potential solutions, not to mention a "call to action."
This is beyond comical - I am pretty sure that one day I'll die from laughter (and probably the entire world).
Mr. Rich is not a political scientist, and he is doing quite a good job in his capacity. I haven't never seen such stupid people who don't know a difference between political writer and cultural analyst; analyst and strategist, etc.
Frank, why don't you lift your dirty, smel-y a-s and do yourself something?
"Yet another excellent essay from Mr. Rich - and another essay lacking even the suggestion of potential solutions, not to mention a "call to action."
This is beyond comical - I am pretty that one day I'll day from laughter (and probably the entire world).
Mr. Rich is not a political scientist, and he is doing quite a good job in his capacities. I haven't never seen such stupid people who don't know a difference between political writer and cultural analyst; analyst and strategist,
Why don't you lift your dirty, smel-y a-s and do yourself something?
When I hear people like moron Bush talk about how wonderful it is that we removed a tyrant in Iraq and the neocons all agree. I think: we have a worse tyrant Bush/Cheney in the United States and not a damn thing is done about either one of them although they have caused more death and destruction than the tyrant they killed.What do the democrat's do,? give Bush anything he wants and cry we don't have enough votes to overcome a veto. Why in the hell didn't they keep sending the same Iraq war funding bill back to the idiot and let him keep vetoing and not funding the war not the demo's.Speaking of cowards most democrats showed their yellow streak this past week, as long as Nancy impeachment is off the table Pelosi and weakneed Harry Reid lead the demo's you can expect more of the same.How disgusting.
All I can feel is pity for those poor Iraqis who receive the true nature of our military complex. But you can't blame Bush,Cheney and Rumfield alone because our Congress has had years to stop this war against the people in the middle east. And now we have troops heading for Iran. And what does Congress do, but keep up the war with another blank check. Bush doesn't care how many poor souls he sacrifices, including our soldiers. And he never had the nerve to serve. Cowards make the worst leaders.
Yes MichaelIPDA, it is your brontosaurus. But please fix it because it is stomping all over the rest of us in the world outside the US, even your friends who have become or are fast becoming your ex-friends because you cannot or will not control it and we have no say or chance of controlling it.
Having said that I appreciate the problems of reining it in and I agree - a few can get it going and that it takes time. You had a damn good try in the recent elections but now that the Democrats have shown they are painted with a similar brush to the Republicans (they knew that Bush would veto their efforts but can say "Hey, we tried and did our best, but what can you do" - and have not really cut themselves off from those they really look after, the rich corporations that fund both them and the Republicans) you will have to seek other means.
"I'm convinced that any action is useless"
Say it ain't so, Joe. Futility is not an option, though turning off the tube and 'puter and doing a little gardening would be a refreshing respite from the insanity that rules our nation. Stay strong and do not be feint of heart. Hurdles in the past have been overcome. It is always the few who get it going, and as the head bashing has been minimal. I foresee it coming later. It is movement politics and we need all to get this place moving in the correct direction. Like moving a blind, lame bronotsaurus no doubt, but it is afterall our brontosaurus if we train it right.
Bu$h got AWOL in Arkanas. Now 50% of American military got AWOL in Iraq and 760 other places around the globe; and brave and free still do not get it. They still support "our troops", which are not ours in the first place.
For meger few hundreds millions of dollars Corporate America organized Leveraged Buyout (LBO) of $1 Trillion a year military machine payed by duped shareholders.
That is the magic of our financial institution that we promote around the globe for already quite awhile, my friends and we have to applaud that!
The bad news is that such Ponzy schemes tend to collapse from time to time.
To the one that says we need more action and less discussion, I'm convinced that any action is useless. These politicians are the epitome of the ugly American and can't see beyond their crooked noses. It's over, with no help from the other political party, pack your stuff and leave..if you can. I'm to old to leave so am waiting for a leader to start a movement to break-up these United States. Four or five soverign nations will do and I'll stay in Northern California. It's not as far fetched as you think. With Abe Lincoln gone it's possible...someone step forward and count me in.
I very much doubt that Christ would recognize Bush as following any principle that he (Christ) espoused. And I am dead certain that if Christ came to America now and started giving the same or similar message to that in the Bible Bush and his ilk would "disappear" Christ pretty damn quick - and the US pack of zealots constituting that quaintly named group, the "Christian Right" would wholeheartedly support any such action.
Perhaps it was the job of the Iraqi people to remove their own tyrant. And why didn't this happen? Perhaps it was the sanctions against the Iragi people which limited their options to overthrow their tyrant. They needed all the reduced energy they had available just to stay alive.
Perhaps if the U.S. hadn't meddled in their affairs through imposed sanctions, the Iraqis could have improved their circumstances on their own.
Most certainly, the people of the United States are being drained of their energy and resources required to overthrow their own tyrant. It's become clear that it is not an easy thing to arrange. We can empathize with the Iragis for not having been able to handily overthrow their own dictator, and for not being able to handily eject their current foreign occupier, though they are doing a hell of a job.
Iraq refugees? A Christian president? Well, you all, I'm sure he'd be just so glad to take at least several hundred of those poor people to live on his ranch in Crawford, where in true Christian manner he can feed them, shelter them, and clothe them. I'm sure they'd be just so grateful.
And then in true Christian manner, he can cover his costs by charging his rich friends a hefty fee to come on down and shoot an Iraqi. You know, like those macho gentlemen go to Southern game ranches to shoot tame exotic animals to prop up their egos. Those ol' boys seem to think there's no difference. And those Iraqis do owe us some sacrifice and gratitude, don't you know. Maybe he could charge extra for shooting a child. And anyway, who would miss a few hundred lowlife Arab types, right?
What demands that we bring them democracy isn't manifest destiny - it's the White Man's Burden. God has selected us to be the ones who will fulfill god's promise and Christianize the earth. But along the way, America wants to do some business around the world. Make a few bucks while getting consumers. After you convince them to buy your shit you can convince them to believe your shit. It worked in America so it will work everywhere? I hope not.
Hoa binh
Oh, manifest destiny demands that we'll bring them democracy (at least when we aren't overthowing one somewhere), but they are an odd lot afterall--they follow an enigmatic religion, speak a strange, gutteral language, have been killing one another since before biblical times, and some of them dress funny too. We are Americans afterall. So they should have known better than to expect to much from us.
born2Bwild: You had some excellent male metaphors for the American public's view of "all this". You lamented an inability to find female ones. How's this? Those girlfriends and wives of pedophiles who offer their 9 year old daughters in return for malt liquor and meth. That's our consumer culture ignoring the roots of their affluence in the military industrial complex which roves the world destroying it, not even for oil per se, but just to sell the bull dozers and bombs.
Then, too, this predates even the 20th century--all those of you who noted the south, and SC in particular, I reside in SC, albeit thank God I am not from or of here; what of those gracious Southern ladies who picnicked at Civil War battle sites, the ancestors of the viewers of Faux News, and of some of that channel's bimbo hostesses.......
Yet another excellent essay from Mr. Rich - and another essay lacking even the suggestion of potential solutions, not to mention a "call to action." Just point out the problem, collect a check.
What if 50 million "liberals" flooded the State Department with Iraqi visa sponsorship applications via names provided by NGOs with access to that kind of info? What if "liberal" Governors announced their own plans for bringing in Iraqi (and Afghani, for that matter,) refugees? What if we progressives started doing more than just penning really insightful essays about stuff we already know?
Is it possible for the people of the United States to change the imperialistic fiasco of the Iraq invasion into a truly unselfish humanitarian effort? Here is a suggestion: send Bush and Cheney to Iraq and bring 5 million refugees to the US. The US would still get the better part of the bargain, but it would be a start.
The politicians who do the right thing and get us out of Iraq are going to have to brave the spin doctors and the moronic media jerks who will blame them for 'losing' the war.
If the top mainstream media figures would lay the blame for losing the war on Bu$h the inferior right now they would at least be useful.
Bu$h the inferior lost the war because he sent the military into a job that is impossible. We could KILL all the people in Iraq. Seeing that is not the goal why use the military? The pursuit of money is the root of all evil.
Imagine all those church picnics following the latest lynching. The south has been raised on religious beliefs that encourage prejudice and "murder of outsiders." When their "church leaders" tell them who is "god's own man" they vote for him (occasionally her). It goes back to the mentality of the authoritarian mindset which is right in lockstep with fundamentalist religious thought. Hey, you can't question the bible, right? Or "god's word." These people BELIEVE that on threat of hell and damnation. LOGIC means nothing to this faith based, and were they only a mere several hundred in some kind of Jim Jones deluded trance. No. We are talking 40-50 million, and no one has chronicled this contingent better than Bill Moyers. Citing the popularity of the End times books by Tim Le Haye, Moyers estimates about 45 million followers, arguably the same ONES who support Bush. Keep in mind that if your "faith" tells you the end is near, that Jesus is about to return, then the bigger the mess the greater their belief that their version of god will fix it all. This is why they back Bush. They see all the weather events as SIGNS of our times, PROOF that the END is near. They welcome Bush "bringing it on" in the Middle East. Note how much this deluded belief dovetails with the equally deranged military notion of M.A.D (mutually assured destruction). Isn't it amazing how religion has yoked so thoroughly with militarism to produce this percentage of followers of a creed that could well destroy us all? They worship a destructive deity, hardly the one embodied by Jesus, or any other Master. I'm sure some Jews have an equally derailed spiritual concept, ditto some Muslims. Fanaticism in any religious cloak smells the same. And that is what's endangering mankind, along with the worship of mammon (via the self-proclaimed power of corporations suddenly answerable to neither citizenry nor nation.) The best words that come to mind (insofar as humor proves therapeutic), "A fine mess you've gotten us into..." (Laurel and Hardy)
It leaves a person breathless - the extent they'll go to excuse themselves for one of the most horrific acts in American history. I'm still trying to reconcile the fact that they were installed in office, and that a signifcant number of Americans voted for them. I think of South Carolina, a state that returned a racist and a bigot to the Senate until he was too old and senile to know what he was voting for or against. Lindsey Graham, apparently his mentor, introduced the legislation that denied certain prisoners Habeus Corpus. What incredible arrogance! Centuries of due process, recognized by every free society on the planet, and this ridiculous hic doesn't agree with it. Do people from South Carolina come from pods? The entire south seems to share this strange kind of ignorance. Saxby slandered Max Cleland, a war hero who left three limbs in Vietnam, to win Georgia's Senate seat. The people of Georgia had no problem believing Saxby's claims that Max Cleland was unpatriotic! The south has a common solution to international problems or conflicts. Nuke 'em, or kick their ass, or some derivitive thereof. I don't see how democracy can survive such brainless folk. Now the U.S. doesn't like Iran because they're developing nuclear weapons. Nothing will do but attacking Iran and bringing Iranians democracy too. Oh Allah, they must pray, protect us from freedom. How Bush is allowed to continue his insane policies without someone intervening is beyond me. Oviously, the damn fool must be stopped from causing anymore damage. The new, democratic Congress was supposed to clip his wings but Bush said Boo! at them and they ran away gibbering in fear and terror. I only hope they weren't the last line of defence against Junior.
It's always been Operation Iraqi Liquidation (OIL).
it is apparently easy these days for a vast swath of the public, via a supine and accommodating whore of a media to be led around like so many horny johns. ironically, men behave more like eunuchs (women - i'm not prepared to say what corrsponding metaphor fits here...). all it takes is some pronouncement from on high (high on that most dangerous of substances - power), and that pathetic excuse for an "informed" citizenry falls in line like a herd of lemmings.
"support the troops" has become the most dangerous and manipulating phrase of our time, while any compassion for actual victims of this growing tragedy is offset by fears of "fighting them here." in the thrall of official dogma and approved images, most people oppose the occupation but also oppose cutting off the funds to continue it. whatever risk to this country from outside forces, it is plain to me that we will succumb to a poison that is self-administered.
The greatest foreign policy disaster the world has known. You'd think that an administration built on MBA thinking, even if it wallowed in failed MBA thinking before gaining office, might have thought that if you want to sell a product you should have a product first, then give it the Madison Avenue spin.
They've been spinning for six years now, and still have no product. Even in the unstated reason for this foolish foray, oil, the product still is not being produced.
Unfortunately, there never was a product for this crew of mutineers to democracy. Spin needs a foundation. This administration has not foundation--ethical or otherwise.
If the mainstream media showed actual footage of the carnage in Iraq, a country absolutely broken by bad US policy, the outcry would be immense. A recent poll showed that too many Americans think the death toll is about 3000 or so in Iraq, hardly the estimated 600,000 that IS the truth. If Americans SAW footage of what the citizens are doing to get out of that expensively rendered Hell, they would hardly be so cavalier in allowing the new false-framers to depict the debacle as the fault of the victims. Wow. Who provided that analogy of Bush as abusive husband? Here it fits again!
I'd be willing for the U.S. to absorb Iraqi refugess on account of our huge moral failure in launching the war.
However, when the helicopters begin lifting our diplomats off of the roof our new embassy, I sincerely hope that the entire Iraqi "leadership" is left behind to reap their own justly due rewards.
I cannot think of a more fitting fate for that group of Quislings.
Cheney is a Dick.