No Blood for... Er... Um...
The Oil Majors Take a Little Sip of the Ol' Patrimony
More than five years after the invasion of Iraq -- just in case you were still waiting -- the oil giants finally hit the front page...
Last Thursday, the New York Times led with this headline: "Deals with Iraq Are Set to Bring Oil Giants Back." (Subhead: "Rare No-bid Contracts, A Foothold for Western Companies Seeking Future Rewards.") And who were these four giants? ExxonMobil, Shell, the French company Total and BP (formerly British Petroleum). What these firms got were mere "service contracts" -- as in servicing Iraq's oil fields -- not the sort of "production sharing agreements" that President Bush's representatives in Baghdad once dreamed of, and that would have left them in charge of those fields. Still, it was clearly a start. The Times reporter, Andrew E. Kramer, added this little detail: "[The contracts] include a provision that could allow the companies to reap large profits at today's prices: the [Iraqi oil] ministry and companies are negotiating payment in oil rather than cash." And here's the curious thing, exactly these four giants "lost their concessions in Iraq" back in 1972 when that country's oil was nationalized. Hmmm.
You'd think the Times might have slapped some kind of "we wuz wrong" label on the piece. I mean, remember when the mainstream media, the Times included, seconded the idea that Bush's invasion, whatever it was about -- weapons of mass destruction or terrorism or liberation or democracy or bad dictators or... well, no matter -- you could be sure of one thing: it wasn't about oil. "Oil" wasn't a word worth including in serious reporting on the invasion and its aftermath, not even after it turned out that American troops entering Baghdad guarded only the Oil and Interior Ministries, while the rest of the city was looted. Even then -- and ever after -- the idea that the Bush administration might have the slightest urge to control Iraqi oil (or the flow of Middle Eastern oil via a well-garrisoned Iraq) wasn't worth spending a few paragraphs of valuable newsprint on.
I always thought that, if Iraq's main product had been video games, sometime in the last five years the Times (and other major papers) would have had really tough, thoughtful pieces, asking really tough, thoughtful questions, about the effects of the invasion and ensuing chaos on our children's lives and the like. But oil, well... After all, with global demand for energy on the rise, why would anybody want to invade, conquer, occupy, and garrison a country that, as Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz once observed, "floats on a sea of oil"?
And let's be fair. At the time of the impending invasion, reasonable people couldn't possibly have imagined that it had anything to do with oil, not while George W. Bush was politely ignoring the subject, except when referring obliquely to Iraq's "patrimony" of "natural resources." Forget that our President had had an 11-year career in the energy business (and had been Arbusto-ed); or that his Vice President had been the CEO of a giant energy services corporation, Halliburton -- retiring during the presidential campaign of 2000 with a $34 million severance package; or that, back in those distant years, he had not hesitated to talk about the necessity of getting a tad more oil into the international pipeline. (As he told an oil industry crowd back in 1999, "By some estimates there will be an average of two percent annual growth in global oil demand over the years ahead along with conservatively a three percent natural decline in production from existing reserves. That means by 2010 we will need on the order of an additional fifty million barrels a day. So where is the oil going to come from?" Where indeed? He then answered his own question: "While many regions of the world offer great oil opportunities, the Middle East, with two-thirds of the world's oil and the lowest cost, is still where the prize ultimately lies.")
Or how about the President's national security advisor, who was on the board of Chevron and had a double-hulled oil tanker, the Condoleezza Rice, named after her in the oh-so-innocent 1990s. Forget as well the Veep's secret energy task force of 2000 (also starring ExxonMobil and pals) which recommended that the new administration turn its good offices to convincing Middle Eastern countries "to open up areas of their energy sectors to foreign investment." Forget it all and be fair.
After all, the only people who thought that oil might have something to do with the invasion of Iraq weren't on the Times staff. They weren't, in fact, in the mainstream at all. And, to put things into context, depending on your estimates, there were only somewhere between 11 million and 30 million of them marching around in the streets of cities and towns all over the planet before the invasion, carrying signs that said ludicrous, easily dismissible things like: "No Blood for Oil," "How did USA's oil get under Iraq's sand?" and "Don't trade lives for oil!"
Let's face it: Among those who counted, they -- with their simpleminded slogans on hand-lettered placards -- just didn't count at all. Not when everyone who was anyone knew that the world was a much, much, much subtler and much, much more complicated place. No blood for oil? Sure, it was short and snappy and easy enough to get on a sign, but also about as absurdly reductionist, as unsubtle, as uncomplicated as possible.
I mean, really! And, worse yet, that thoughtless crew of demonstrators had the nerve to suspect -- prospectively, not retrospectively -- the worst of the Bush administration, even when their betters, men (and a few women) with so many years of experience in the ways of Washington and the world, were ready to give its top officials the benefit of the doubt. Waving those silly signs, they actually expected bad things to happen. It didn't seem to matter to them that the President, Vice President, National Security Advisor, and Secretary of Defense assured them no such thing was possible; assured them, in fact, that not to invade would lead to mushroom clouds over American cities and Iraqi unmanned aerial vehicles spraying bio- or chemical weaponry along the east coast of the United States.
No wonder those masses of naíve demonstrators have been erased from the blackboard of history. No wonder, since the invasion, the Times hasn't bothered to attend to them seriously again. No wonder, on the fifth anniversary of the Bush administration's "cakewalk" to victory in Baghdad, the newspaper's op-ed page turned to L. Paul Bremer III, Richard Perle, and others from the crew that got us into Iraq, or cheered the administration on, to comment on what had gone wrong, while skipping the crew in the streets that got it right in the first place.
Now, with a barrel of crude selling at more than quadruple its prewar price, more than double its price a mere year ago, the oil majors are finally moving in for the... well, let's not say "kill," let's just say that tasty little sip of the ol' patrimony.
And, by the way, here's how Times reporter Kramer, in a single paragraph, managed to (barely) reintroduce those missing prewar demonstrators, while sidling up to reality and history: "There was suspicion," he wrote, "among many in the Arab world [notoriously suspicious types, of course] and among parts of the American public that the United States had gone to war in Iraq precisely to secure the oil wealth these contracts seek to extract. The Bush administration has said that the war was necessary to combat terrorism. It is not clear what role the United States played in awarding the contracts; there are still American advisors to Iraq's Oil Ministry."
Arabs with suspicions and unidentified "parts" of the American public, all in the same sentence. Still sounds dismissible to me. Well, you know those types. They deserve no less. They're the sorts who might even be suspicious of "American advisors to Iraq's Oil Ministry," or, yet more absurdly, of those "no-bid" contracts for the oil majors -- and just because it was in the DNA of the Bush administration to award similar no-bid contracts to corporate cronies like... uh... Halliburton. But the odds are that "the Iraqis" who awarded those contracts probably just knew a good idea when they saw one up close and personal over so many years.
And now, here we are. Sure, it's kinda thoughtless, kinda embarrassing, and yet so typical of ExxonMobil and Co. not to care about making all those pundits and knowledgeable observers look really, really bad. What an unfortunate coincidence, this story breaking just now, don't you think? I mean, after all that blood, American and Iraqi, has been spilled, here comes the oil.
It's the sort of thing that could make suspicious Arabs even more so and give a new life to some really dumb slogans in the U.S. But you know, sometimes, if you're an oil giant, you just have to bite the bullet. After all, there's still one heck of a lot of that patrimonial oil in Iraq's ground. At more than $130 a barrel, someone has to get it out -- and why not, as Kramer puts it, "western companies with experience managing large projects"? I mean, after all these years, why not?
Tom Engelhardt, co-founder of the American Empire Project, runs the Nation Institute's TomDispatch.com. The World According to TomDispatch: America in the New Age of Empire (Verso, 2008), a collection of some of the best pieces from his site, has just been published. Focusing on what the mainstream media hasn't covered, it is an alternative history of the mad Bush years. A brief video in which Engelhardt discusses American mega-bases in Iraq can be viewed by clicking here.
[Note on further reading: In its follow-up piece on the "no-bid" contracts, the Washington Post added a fifth oil giant, Chevron, to the list and managed, as well, to include this already familiar paragraph: "A higher-profile role for Western companies in Iraq's oil industry is likely to revive speculation that the Iraq war was motivated by a desire to tap into reserves that were controlled by foreigners until the 1960s, when the industry was nationalized. The belief is widespread in the Arab world." Like some cameo role in a film, this cameo paragraph is evidently all that's now left of the largest prewar antiwar movement in history. For some good background on the history of Western exploitation of Iraqi oil and its subsequent nationalization, check out Juan Cole's "They're Baaack..." at his Informed Comment blog. (And, while you're at it, don't miss his recent devastating description of "the real state of Iraq.") A good source to consult for regular Iraqi oil news is Ben Lando's Iraq Oil Report.]
Copyright 2008 Tom Engelhardt
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36 Comments so far
Show Alljakenewton June 24th, 2008 8:21 pm
Thank you jakenewton.
"Support Hugo Chavez."
Why? By subsidizing gas so it's only pennies a gallon, Chavez actually *deprives* his people of the cash they could have gotten for that gas on the world market. Cash can be used for *anything*. Cheap gas is just cheap gas, and is helpful only for the Venazeulans who own cars, and encourages waste. You should also look into the conditions under which the Vanezuelen oil workers are subject, and the local environmental issues around that industry.
Talk about long winded, I could have just said
frank1569 June 23rd, 2008 1:54 pm
jpbreeze June 23rd, 2008 2:09 pm
greenerthanthou June 23rd, 2008 6:43 pm
alexnosal June 23rd, 2008 7:25 pm
GottaGetOffTheGrid June 24th, 2008 12:23 pm
Little Brother June 24th, 2008 12:15 pm
are right and I was wrong. Next time I'll cut it down.
GottaGetOffTheGrid June 24th, 2008 12:23 pm
"the US is bound by any treaties they enter into by the Constitution. This would include the Geneva conventions, the ban on torturing folks, use of child soldiers, etc."
Little Brother June 24th, 2008 12:15 pm
Same point made.
Of course you are both correct. Oversight on my part and thank you both for pointing it out. Looks like my wife and Ladybird are right. I'm not always 100% correct.
But Little Brother.....
"Nothing contained in the present Charter shall authorize the United Nations to intervene in matters which are essentially within the domestic jurisdiction of any state or shall require the Members to submit such matters to settlement under the present Charter; but this principle shall not prejudice the application of enforcement"
So you see UN law does not carry any force in the United States.
However....here's where you get me and here's where I'm wrong....
All Members, in order to ensure to all of them the rights and benefits resulting from membership, shall fulfill in good faith the obligations assumed by them in accordance with the present Charter.
All Members shall settle their international disputes by peaceful means in such a manner that international peace and security, and justice, are not endangered.
All Members shall refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state, or in any other manner inconsistent with the Purposes of the United Nations.
Under these criteria and considering the lies that led to the Invasion of Iraq, I could make a good case that under our agreement to the UN Charter (which is indeed a treaty) and the circumstances of the continuing occupation, under American Law per se it is not illegal, but under our treaty agreement it is indeed an illegal war.
Therefore.....
frank1569 June 23rd, 2008 1:54 pm
jpbreeze June 23rd, 2008 2:09 pm
greenerthanthou June 23rd, 2008 6:43 pm
alexnosal June 23rd, 2008 7:25 pm
GottaGetOffTheGrid June 24th, 2008 12:23 pm
Little Brother June 24th, 2008 12:15 pm
Are all absolutely correct and I was wrong in my supposition and a couple of facts. I appreciate very much your helping me out here. You all answered my original question and filled in various blanks.
Besides, if I weren't officially wrong in writing at least once a day, my wife would think I was sick.
Again, thanks guys and gals.
The reason why our country is facing hard times -- if that's what we're facing -- is because of all this political divisiveness. Each side (liberal, conservative) wants to win. They'll smear the other side any way they can. People don't really care about improving the world. I find this site very similar to www.americanthinker.com.
We don't need oil. We can build more nuclear reactors to have electricity. Bill O'Reilly advocates this and cites France and Norway as inspiration.
If the Iraq War was about oil then we would have cheaper gas at the pump.
Just two weeks ago we find out about the Bushka military bases.
Four new permanant bases, for iraq as part of a new treaty deal.
Congress goes crazy, they wern't cut in on the deal, but the are now.
Surprise, our 100 year bases can protect the 4 new American oil company contracters about to take control of maintance for a country sitting on a sea of oil.
2001 oil $22/barell
2008 oil $135/barell
We have to do something , $250/barell is on its way.
Wow , this whole war has been one gigantic but fest.
I don't know about you , but I sure could use some of that oil for lube, I'm getting raw.
SO !!!!!
So,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,so,etc.etc.etc
I haven't bought Exxon since the Valdez oil spill. I haven't bought Shell since I found out that they supplied the helicopters that killed activists in Nigeria (about 10 years ago).
Also,
Iraq was attacked shortly after Saddam announced that they would start trading oil in Euros.
Iran recently announced that they would shortly trade oil in Euros.
Any connection with Iran being next on the list?
It's the oil, stupid.
Would the artificially propped up dollar collapse without the oil being traded in dollars? Or the better question is, how long before the dollar would collapse?
Cold War ain't over... we want that oil because our military jets and tanks run on... er.... um... oil. And we don't want China, Russia's, Saddam, Chavez, or Ahmadinejad's hands controlling the spiggot. Cause the Cold War ain't over.
The invasions were illegal for several reasons.
First of all the case for invading Iraq was based on lies.
Second of all Iraq never posed a threat to the U.S. except to a handful of Big Oil companies of course.
Third of all the vast majority of nations did not give their approval exactly because Iraq posed no threat.
Would Congress have O.K.'d the invasion if Bush said...
"This invasion will not only secure large oil fileds, but it will also be a major boon to a handful of multinational corporations. I promise I will follow the path outlaid by Milton Friedman's 'crock of shit' economics that justify corporate hegemony while handing my closest pals high government posts to help dismantle America's social safety net. So please start the ball rolling as this will suck the American middle class dry while our corporate media instills a false sense of fear into the general populace. Unless you're in that bottom 90%, I don't see how you can possibly deny me the trillions I'll need."
BOYCOTT THESE FOUR OIL COMPANIES: EXXON, BP, TOTAL, SHELL. LET THEM KNOW WE DON'T APPRECIATE PAYING $3 TRILLION TO HELP THEM GET AT IRAQ'S OIL.
http://www.commondreams.org/views03/0310-07.htm
The occupation, the torture, the targeting of civilians, journalists, water supplies and hospitals, the puppet government, Bremer's directives, the blockades, all of it is illegal.
But the invasion is the supreme crime that encompasses all the subsequent war crimes within it.
In addition to the history Tom Engelhardt recounts concerning the big demonstrations in the run up to the invasion of Iraq, and the mainstream US media's uniform decision to marginalize those protests as not newsworthy at the time, another good source for historical context is the text of the 2002 Iraq War Authorization for Use of Military Force resolution.
In the AUMF's 23 separate "Whereas" clauses justifying the invasion decision, oil is never mentioned. Neither is there a single mention anywhere of Iran, Israel, integrating Iraq into the global market economy, building long term military bases on Iraqi soil, advancing human rights, nor transforming authoritarian governments throughout the Middle East.
Instead, in this federal statute there are:
16 references to Saddam possessing chemical, biological, and/or nuclear weapons of mass destruction;
16 references to the importance of upholding UN Security Council resolutions and Saddam's defiance of the will of the United Nations;
11 references to the need to protect the United States from the threat of imminent military attack by Iraq;
10 references to international terrorism and Saddam's alleged support of terrorism;
8 references to protecting Iraq's Middle Eastern neighbors from military attack by Iraq;
5 references to the 9/11 attack upon the United States;
4 references to Saddam's repression of the Iraqi civilian population;
3 references to Saddam's lack of full cooperation with UN weapons inspectors;
2 references to Saddam's invasion of Kuwait over a decade earlier; and
One reference each, to each of the following: Al Qaeda, regime change, Saddam's complicity in an assassination attempt upon former president Bush, an American pilot believed held in captivity in Iraq, and, oh yes, democracy.
In 1991, the Senate debate on the Gulf War resolution put forward by the first President Bush was very up front about the connection between Saddam and the threat to the world oil supply. If he could overthrow the government of Kuwait, then maybe the Saudis would be next.
In contrast, in 2002 and 2003 George the Lesser adamantly and consistently denied that the US invasion had anything whatsoever to do with gaining control over Iraq's oil. The White House was shocked - shocked! - that anybody would even venture to suggest that such a motivation was involved.
In addition to the return of the same western oil companies that were ousted in 1972, I read somewhere recently that several of the proposed long term, enduring, non-permanent US military bases under behind-the-scenes discussion with the Maliki regime coincidentally are positioned along a closed oil pipeline that once upon a time ran from the Iraqi fields to..... Haifa.
Were it not for the death, the destruction, the torture, the grandiose looting of the public treasury, and the gutting of our Bill of Rights, the transparency of these macabre lies would be laughable.
Bill from Saginaw
Congress cannot give Bush the authority to break international law, anymore than your boss can order you to go buy him some pot.
A war of aggression is the supreme international crime, and all the other crimes committed are encompassed within it. (Nuremberg trials)
Suspecting that another country has WMD is not a reason to invade, nor is trying to gain control of their oil.
"Thomas, what is the meaning of "it may be criminal, but it's not illegal"?"
In my opinion the attack on Iraq was criminal in the moral sense as they had a pretty good idea what the truth was, it's obviously turned out to be stupid and as we now know it was the act of cowards that never would have gone themselves. They proved that when it was their time.
But Congress gave them the approval so it's not illegal. Congress has the power and like fools they handed it over.
I see why that sentence could lead to confusion because criminal would indicate illegal. Sorry!
Thomas More June 23rd, 2008 3:39 pm:
"Congress gave Dick Vader and his boy along with the rest the authority to attack. If thats true and I'm sure it is, it may be stupid, it may be criminal, but it's not illegal. Correct?"
Thomas, what is the meaning of "it may be criminal, but it's not illegal"?
Hence, two illegal invasions could never, ever be "about oil,"
"Operation Iraqi Liberation (OIL) was what the illegal invasion of Iraq"
I've seen this many times before, but I thought I'd ask how you and others reach this conclusion? Congress gave Dick Vader and his boy along with the rest the authority to attack. If thats true and I'm sure it is, it may be stupid, it may be criminal, but it's not illegal. Correct?
"If there's one thing Arrogance hates,
it's dictators in oil-rich states.
We shoot them with bullets, rockets and bombs,
and you can see it all on your color television..."
-- notes from the Third Galaxy
The "people of the oil and natural gas industry" are running lots of ads on the networks lately. One of them wants us to remember that everyone who has a 401K, pension plan, mutual fund investment,etc. probably owns a stake in their industry. What's good for big oil is good for all of us! So next time you want to complain about blood for oil or drilling in ANWR, sky high prices at the pump or befouled beaches: STOP and THINK! You too could own a piece of the action and your share might have earned you a whopping $15 or $20 so far this year. Now isn't it all worth it? Let the good times roll.
Operation Iraqi Liberation (OIL) was what the illegal invasion of Iraq was first code-named while the operation was being conducted from March 19th, 2003 to May 1st, 2003.
At least the Idiot Savant and his neoconservative Israelites had the forethought to change it to Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) before someone realized what this occupation is really about.
If you need further proof that is was about OIL, read the entire, Project for the New American Century, you'll find it in there, along with what else they have cooked up for our immediate future, with the last piece of the puzzle to be for our Government to have sweeping spy and Internet control over all of us, which is about to come to fruition with this new FISA legislation!
Tom's comment about the brief, backhanded references in the NYT and WaPo related to those who recognized in advance that Bush's invasion of Iraq was for oil...."No war for oil"....omitted one half of the equation.
It was "No war for oil and Israel."
The same applies to today as Bush and his Neocons prepare to attack Iran.
According to the next President, John McCain, and his favorite propagandists, FOX News, The United States of America is the greatest nation on the face of the Earth, and that has ever been on the face of the Earth.
Hence, two illegal invasions could never, ever be "about oil," because The Greatest Nation Ever wouldn't commit such a horrible atrocity. That's what ruthless, greed-crazy countries do, not "us."
But, you see, since "we're" in Iraq and Afghanistan already, you know, like, why not "help" the natives "control" their natural resources, right? Isn't that what is expected from The Greatest Nation in the history of nations? We. Are. Just. Here. To. Help.
There's no other solution but to keep protesting and continuing the fight against Washington crooks and their corporate and media cronies. It took a few years for many Americans to finally accept that the sacrifice of American and Iraqi lives was not for freedom, democracy and security but for oil. In the words of Mahatma Gandhi:
Truth needs to be repeated as long as there are men who do not believe it!
No blood for bullshit is a good start...
As they say, "Blood may be thicker than water, but oil is thicker than either".
I watched CNN's puff piece 'We Were Warned: Out of Gas' last night.
It postulated a natural disaster/terrorist attack that left America without petroleum products for 10-15 days. They consulted a former head of CIA who now drives a hybrid and put solar panels on his roof, but says any measure the US does is warranted.
The talked to Matt Simmons, author of 'Twilight in the Desert', a best case scenario about Peak Oil, who said that without a massive crash program to develop 'technology' (he never specifies what kind of technology) the US is dead meat, and it already may be too late.
The piece predicted massive gas prices and possible shortages of necessities, but never actually came right out and said 'This is a very rosy best case scenario. If the oil is cut off, we are up shit creek without a paddle.'
And the Iranian boogie man was dragged out of the closet, basically testing a toe in the water of the American populace to go to war for oil 'for real this time'.
This is all set up people.
The plans are in motion.
There will be another '9/11' style attack, probably at a major oil facility in the Middle East, that the US will use as THE excuse to attack Iran.
And then all of the Bush Junta's favorite Apocalypse nightmares can come true...
oops x-post with Lil Bro
Thomas Moore said
"Our laws supercedes international law, our country does not live under the rule of international law."
While I agree that the US rarely follows International Law, the US law does not supercede all international laws. the US is bound by any treaties they enter into by the Constitution. This would include the Geneva conventions, the ban on torturing folks, use of child soldiers, etc.
Article IV US Constitution:
"This Constitution, and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof; and all treaties made, or which shall be made, under the authority of the United States, shall be the supreme law of the land; and the judges in every state shall be bound thereby, anything in the Constitution or laws of any State to the contrary notwithstanding."
Thomas More 10:07 am:
"Congress cannot give Bush the authority to break international law"
Our laws supercedes international law, our country does not live under the rule of international law. This is not an argument either way, just a statement of fact.
_____________________________________________
Uh, no. Maybe it's a "statement of fact" to exceptionalists, but in reality-based fact:
Article VI of the US Constitution states that--
"This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land;"
The Geneva Accords and the UN Charter are "treaties"-- as such, they ARE the supreme Law of the Land.
______________________________________
Apparently the idiots who thought this stuff up, and the other idiots who ratified it and enacted into law, ignored or disputed the exceptionalists' absolute truth that the U S of A is the Greatest Country in the World That Ever Was, Is, or Will Be, and thus is above creepy and sinister International Laws cobbled together by grubby foreigners who hate our freedoms.
Apocalypse Now - Bombing Iran
We go about our daily lives not wanting to think about anything else horrific. As it is, we have enough to do just to keep the home fires burning. We cannot think about one more thing or we will go crazy.
But we have to. We cannot turn away and just let this happen. I want so very much to alert and email my friends. However, I know I will be hearing back from some of them and they will be telling me….just like Bill O'Reilly ….SHUT THE HELL UP!
Bad weather, bad food, no jobs, out of sight gas. Why is it, the bigger the crime the less the time. Ha….where have I heard that before?
How do we stop this cycle of war upon endless war? One thing has come to my mind. If there were no wars, our arms manufacturers would have nothing to nourish. There must be some way to disrupt this feeding frenzy. Our precious assets have to be put to better use.
There has to be a way to break up these death merchants. There has to be an accounting for this misuse and abuse of our resources. There has to be a solution and some domestic actions taken to take the profit out of this business. The world cannot afford these purveyors of death any longer. Our entire civilization depends upon it.
Everyone talks sustainability. They want us to recycle our plastic bags, take cans to the recycle centers, ride bikes to work, and car pool. You know, I can see throwing my garbage on a compost heap because I love to feed the worms, and as my gift to the world, I will one day end up as food for the worms.
And, while we were sleeping, the dementors of doom are reaping and pillaging right under our noses. Hell, they boast about it all the time right in the business sections of our newspapers.
Isn't anyone out there listening ? Is anyone out there planning for a future for themselves and their families? Why can't we pull all of this together? Why are we all having such fistfights over the trivia of this world?
I do not care if man marries a man, or a woman marries a woman. I only care about people who care about each other and that they, through the most trying of times stand steadfast, and watch each other's backs.
This is how the most successful creatures of this world have sustained their lives and that of future generations. Moreover, as "Manny" said in ICE AGE ll, " It's what a herd does. " We are all a part of a herd and Mother Earth is giving us imminent warning signals. It may not be the next ice age coming… it could be something worse.
Another thing, I WILL NOT condemn those who have jeopardized their lives crossing the southern borders of this country in order to make a living for themselves and their families. Ninety-nine percent of people crossing the border for economic reasons are honest hard working people who are trying to eke out a living denied to them in their own county because of the policies inflicted upon them by THIS country.
I repeat... people coming into this country for economic reasons are NOT taking anything away from you and me. Moreover, to think that way is just plain stupid. It is divisive and it is planned to do just that. It is intended to divide and conquer the forces that very well could overturn the power structure of this country. THEY know if the beast, we the people if awaken, we out number them. Our numbers could demand justice and we would bring justice thus making their unfit policies go away.
It's like the guy in the lifeboat who is doing a lousy job of steering while the rest of us are rowing our asses off and getting nowhere. The guy steering tells us, "Hey, the guy next to you is not rowing hard enough so throw him over board". Huh? Where does that leave you? Well, now you are rowing harder because you have just thrown your ally overboard. Now you are at risk of being thrown overboard yourself.
It is time now that we all stand back to back and defend ourselves and everyone else who suffers at the hands of these vile merchants. We are all allies and partners in seeking justice. The evidence of this is written in the UNIVERSAL DECLARATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS, Article 25:
1. Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well –being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstance beyond his control.
2. Motherhood and childhood are entitled to special care and assistance. All children whether born in or out of wedlock, shall enjoy the same protection.
There you go. This is called the Commons. It is what we all hold in common. It is a universal truth. You want to change things; change policies that benefit all of us not condemn or restrict others. You cannot deny to others that which you demand for yourself.
This is why we pay taxes. We spread the burden of survival. What you do not realize, are the ways that this Administration has allocated our taxes. The majority of our taxes go to support an unnecessary and illegal war. We in turn get nothing but grief and we have given this grief to those to whom we have harmed by this unlawful action. The more we inflict on others the more that is inflicted on us.
So why is this mandate in Article 25 not being enforced? Because the merchants of death forbid it. It is not profitable enough and because you and I do not enforce these principles. We are too busy nit picking our way to oblivion.
So do we mobilize people in their own best interests? Hell, I am not going to wait for some pie in the sky omnipotent being to save me by taking me to heaven …..and for those who sit on their duffs to say so is such a cop out!
My heaven is here on earth. By my own actions, I can make it a heaven or hell. I refuse to let these profiteers make my world into a hell. That includes ALL Democrats. Now there is a real sin for you! Sitting and doing nothing and funding more war.
I am NOT throwing anyone out of my lifeboat. Unless, it is the people who are steering us toward the cliff. These people always have parachutes and they do not care about you or me. I refuse to go over the cliff and be sent quietly into the permanence of the atomic nightmare.
Ladies and gentlemen, these profiteers are "future- killers" and they are trashing any hopes of survival that we may left. If we, the UNITED STATES OF AMERICA bomb Iran, we can kiss our futures good bye.
The prevailing winds will carry any fall-out from a nuclear facility that is hit in Iran and carry it around the globe and right back over this country. What comes around goes around. Are you prepared to live with that?
"Our doubts are traitors, and make us lose the good we oft might win by fearing to attempt." –Shakespeare's Measure for Measure, Act 1. Sc 4
"Congress cannot give Bush the authority to break international law"
Our laws supercedes international law, our country does not live under the rule of international law. This is not an argument either way, just a statement of fact.
alexnosal June 23rd, 2008 7:25 pm
"Would Congress have O.K.'d the invasion if Bush said…"
Well you'd hope not, but consider this Congress....just kidding, of course not. But the fact is they did, they have that power and they granted it to the little hooter. So its not illegal, because it was done legally.
However, I thought that was an excellent description of their plan.
"We don't need oil. We can build more nuclear reactors to have electricity. Bill O'Reilly (he can't really be Irish) advocates this and cites France and Norway as inspiration."
Obviously we will need oil for the foreseeable future, but even a blind squirrel can find an Acorn in a snowstorm occasionally. O'Reilly is at least right about that, if its done the way they do it, not how we've done it. I hope you washed your hands after watching.
stalepie June 23rd, 2008 10:27 pm
The reason why our country is facing hard times
I'd suggest to you its the policies of the last 12 years that have put us here. The political wrangling doesn't help, but it was those policies and mistakes.
The current situation in which the price of gas has skyrocketed to unimaginable levels has to be one of the largest transfers of wealth in history.
What has the Democratic-Republican Party done about it? Same thing they did when Bush broke the law by spying on us. Nuthin. And for those Big Oil apologists that claim they are just passing along the added costs I say explain the record-breaking profits they are rolling in.
You forget IRAQ was pumping oil to the world before Bush 1. It wasn't until bush 2 shut the whole country down then scream shortage of oil did the price go nuts. I said oil was like Enron over 2 years ago.
"Bill O'Reilly advocates this and cites France and Norway as inspiration."
LOL That is fucceeng hilarious stalepie! Are you a freedom fry, or a french fry?
Buy your gas at Citgo. Support Hugo Chavez.