Smart Is The New Stupid (And Other Subtle But Profound Effects of the Obama Era)
Like every good person I know, and a lot of evil (i.e., regressive) monsters I don't, I've been watching very eagerly and carefully to see what decisions Barack Obama is going to make as our new president.
It makes perfect sense for us to do so, for such policy positions are the bread and butter of any presidency, and arguably the most consequential part of the job. Are we going to invade a country, or not? Are we going to have national health care, or not? Will we saddle our children with unconscionable loads of debt in order to lavish upon the super-rich yet more discretionary income, or not? These are the sorts of questions that go to the heart of what government is and does, and the consequences of their answers can be seen most starkly in the difference between the America a Franklin Roosevelt would make, for example, and the one a George W. Bush would create instead.
In short, policy decisions will matter immensely. And, what is more, they already do, just a scant one month into the Obama presidency. Already he is reorienting America programmatically - ending the Iraq war, closing Guantánamo, building a national health care system, negotiating seriously on global warming, spending heavily on education, energy and infrastructure, and taking strides to reintroduce some small measure of economic justice to the country. We sometimes lose track of this as we contemplate the national politics of these decisions, but they are not abstract propositions - they have enormous consequences in the lives of individuals. To pick just one narrow example close to home, I might very well not be writing this column today, had it not been for the completely unexpected GI Bill which sent my father to college after the war, the first person in my family to make that leap. Meanwhile, six thousand miles away, perhaps a million people lie dead amongst the rubble that George W. Bush made out of Iraq.
Yep, these things matter, and we are completely justified in devoting so much attention to what presidents do in making such decisions.
Sometimes, though, other effects of presidencies can be quite subtle compared to their overt policy decisions, though equally if not more profound. In much the same way that the application of soft power - in addition to or instead of hard power - can be a hugely consequential instrument of foreign policy, a similar effect applies on the domestic front. Who can say that George Washington's policy decisions as president were more consequential in the long run than the ethos he brought to the presidency as its first occupant and the impact that had in launching and sustaining the new republic? Who can say whether it was more important that FDR created Social Security than it was that he inspired hope across an entire nation's beaten-down and frightened population? Who can say whether Ronald Reagan did more damage by tripling the national debt than he did by getting Americans to believe that their own democratically elected government was the enemy? And I think all of us can say that, with the possible exception of his handling of the Cuban Missile Crisis, John Kennedy's inspirational ethos entirely dwarfed in impact much of anything he actually did policy-wise during the brief thousand days of his presidency.
Similarly, a successful Obama presidency - and my guess is that he will turn out to be regarded by history as one of the best, even if he doesn't turn out to be among the most progressive (though he might do that too) - will have powerful effects of a very tangible nature, such as (hopefully) rescuing the economy, ending the Iraq folly, and creating a real national health care system (only about a hundred years behind the curve, but who's counting?). But it will also produce a raft of far less immediately tangible effects, which may well even surpass in magnitude those of the policy decisions.
It's worth thinking a bit about what those might include.
An obvious place to begin is with race relations, the open wound of American politics from more or less the time there was an America to have politics. Racism has not, and will not, be destroyed on the altar of the Barack Obama presidency. There are definitely places in America where killing racism will require no less than the death of dyed-in-the-wool racists, to be replaced by more enlightened generations. But apart from those cracker boxes, imagine the effect Obama can have among the less committed core of racists in the majority population. If this guy becomes a Lincoln- or FDR-like figure, how palpably ridiculous will it be to continue to maintain the notions of superiority that are at the core of racist attitudes? How absurdly unsustainable will it be to continue to believe those fallacies? The very fact of a successful black presidency could do more than a thousand federal programs toward the changing of pernicious attitudes in American society. And changing attitudes is the key that unlocks all kinds of other doors, including bringing changes both to other attitudes and to policies.
Likewise, imagine what the effects of a successful Obama presidency will mean to the black community in terms of subtle but profound attitude changes. I'd be shocked if the impact on how blacks see themselves, and therefore on what they demand of themselves and what they demand of others, isn't changed substantially - and, again, in ways that government programs could probably never replicate even at their most successful. This transcends the old cliche about anybody being able to grow up to become president of the United States. This is about a champion who carries on his shoulders the aspirations and self-assessments of a nation. For better or worse, this is a common psychology that cannot be ignored, and the black community has been overdue for its manifestation in a big way. Probably the last person to carry even a fraction as much national pride for African Americans was Thurgood Marshall.
But even Supreme Court justices might as well be room furnishings compared to the visibility of the president, and therefore, there has really been nothing comparable to this moment. Of course, implicit in all this is the ‘if' of whether or not Obama has a successful presidency. I expect he will, but there is also a very edgy flip side here. If things go sour for him with the country, a la, say, Jimmy Carter, that will only add ammunition to the racist arsenal, and perhaps even diminish rather than enhance self-esteem within the black community. Eh, Colin? Eh, Condi? Eh, Clarence?
A second obvious effect of the Obama administration has to do with reorienting American attitudes toward government. Again, there will be hard policy decisions that will determine things like how we get our health care and whether industry can pollute the atmosphere unregulated. But what is also likely to emerge from this period, and this presidency, is a new and infinitely more sane relationship between American government and Americans. We've always had a real wide paranoid streak in this country when it comes to this question, and one that is both unique among comparable democracies and simultaneously unjustified by any particular historical experience. We had nasty King George III - over two centuries ago, mind you - whose greatest crime seems to have been imposing taxes on the colonists without letting them vote on the legislation. Bummer, man. A sub-optimal governance system, to be sure. But this in a world which has given us Stalin, Mao, Hitler and Pol Pot - each of whom have eradicated millions of their own people - let alone a plethora of your garden-variety thuggish dictators ranging from Pinochet to the Shah to Marcos and Sudan's al-Bashir. Given the relative levels of oppression - not to mention lethality - in these and scads of other cases compared to the American experience, even our revolution let alone our raging and congenital public antipathy toward government seem pretty silly.
Of course, there's money to be made from fomenting such nonsense, and now we get to the heart of the matter. If you fear and loathe government, then you'll oppose programs like Social Security or national health care. And if you do that, rich people won't have to pay taxes in order to support such programs. Hence, the attitude, and hence Ronald Reagan and the contemporary conservative movement which loves war and regulating other peoples' sexuality, but is fundamentally at its core about cutting taxes.
It still astonishes me to this day that an American president - democratically elected, no less - could actually say, "Government is not the solution, government is the problem". All the more astonishing that it could resonate powerfully with the electorate. But this is actually precisely my point here. Just as FDR's New Deal broke the psychological barrier of a government functioning to assist its public (what a concept, eh?), so I believe Obama's programs and attitude will go a long way toward burying the regnant political ethos of these last three miserable decades - that government is bad, and that the less it does the better. Grover Norquist, noxious anti-tax enforcer for the noxious anti-tax right, once said his goal was to "shrink government down to the size where we can drown it in the bathtub". My sense is that the American people, having experienced life under his vision and life under the FDR/Obama alternative, will turn decisively, and finally, from the former to the latter. And, again, this will be the result of a hugely consequential change of attitude more than any particular programmatic or legislative development. If we get very lucky, we can shrink this deceitful and pernicious regressive sickness down to the size where we can flush it into the sewer where it belongs.
A related phenomenon concerns the American mythology of government competence. This notion is fulminated by greedy elites and propagated by the legions of dumbed-down dittoheads who not only take their attitudinal marching orders from Rush Limbaugh, but who actually think he is amusing. Anyhow, the song goes like this: Government is incompetent and screws up everything it touches, whereas the captains of industry in the private sector are infallible (you know, like the ones at AIG, GM, Citigroup, Lehman Brothers, Bank of America, etc.). Here's George F. Will this week with an off-hand but typical example, as he desperately launches a rear-guard salvo against Obama's attempt to rescue us from poverty: "The stimulus legislation, a.k.a. No Social Worker Left Behind, offers financial incentives for states to enlarge their welfare rolls. This looks like the beginning of a semi-stealthy repeal of the 1996 welfare reform. So it goes, as government, with a confidence disconnected from its current performance, toils to make more and more people more and more dependent on it."
You know, god forbid we should put some money in the hands of poor people made poorer by this crisis. That smells an awfully lot like godless socialism to me. But, more to the point, the little snipe at government's "current performance" says it all. Given that the one-month old Obama administration's policies cannot possibly be measured for effectiveness yet, I think we can agree on just whose performance we're talking about here. George W. Bush was a walking case of self-fulfilling prophecy. Not only about the dangers of genetic lottery in a monarchy, of course, but especially about what happens when you put buffoonish kleptocrats in charge of running institutions they don't believe in. Heckuva job, Bushie.
The truth - mortal enemy of the entire regressive movement - is that the success of government is dependent upon the same factors as the success of any given corporation or any other major institution. If the mission makes sense, and the people involved are top quality, and the resources are there, and the timing is right, then the chances of a happy outcome are high. What has the private sector ever done that can match the Manhattan Project, going to the moon, or defeating totalitarianism for daunting tasks, whatever one thinks of the merits of any of those projects? And, even when you see some impressive stuff - like for example the creation of the Internet - guess who's behind the private sector in making it happen?
I'm hoping and expecting that the combination of George Bush's hated failures and Barack Obama's welcome successes will go a long way toward purging the public of this attitude, perhaps once and for all. Other developed democracies don't have these silly debates. Everyone recognizes that there is a positive role to be played by competent government, same as there is for the private sector. A more grown-up America will do the same, and we can get past this debilitating attitude - bequeathed to us by the predators amongst us for purposes of enhancing their ill-gotten profits - that government is incompetent. An attitude change of that magnitude will open many policy and programmatic doors now shut by America's brainwashed political culture.
Another sickening development that I expect to be changing profoundly nowadays is American support for an imperialist foreign policy. Of course, we never acknowledge it to be that, but there is simply no question that a country with nearly a thousand military bases around the world, that spends more on its military than all other countries of the world - nearly 200 of them - combined, and that invades countries like Iraq or Panama or Grenada or Nicaragua whenever it damn well feels like it - there can be no question that this is an empire. Americans loved their non-empire empire, and they loved how powerful it made a people who were not finding self-fulfillment elsewhere feel. But empires are expensive, in every way. Even by 2003, and even in the immediate wake of 9/11, Americans didn't want to go to war in Iraq, despite no doubt believing it would be the cakewalk we were told it would be.
Today, another imperial adventure of this sort would be far harder to sell. The process of Americans weaning themselves away from such lethal foolishness really began earlier, with the last imperial disaster - in Southeast Asia. Already, long before 2003, the government realized that it needed an all ‘volunteer' military, a coopted and corralled press, hidden fiscal costs, a machine-intensive military force, and a ban on photos of the Dover AFB caskets for those few but inevitable (American) human casualties, in order to continue to prosecute its imperial adventures. My expectation and hope is that this reluctance to engage in militarism will grow manifold, for several reasons.
Chief among them, of course, has to do with Iraq. Let's give credit where credit is due: no one has given American imperialism a worse name than George W. Bush. But I hope that Obama's return to multilateral and bilateral diplomacy will also remind Americans that there are better ways than war to do things in most situations, thus further discrediting the very most gruesome form of regressive insanity there is (and that is a very robust competition, indeed). Additionally, as our fiscal situation begins to deteriorate, there will be new pressures on a ‘defense' budget that is as sure a sign of societal sickness as one can imagine. You'll know America has changed its stripes when you start hearing the debate about whether we need to spend six or seven hundred billion dollars per year to fund a force arrayed against not a single enemy in the world other than a rag-tag band of guerilla fighters who basically cannot be defeated by military means anyhow. In any case, once again, what we're talking about here is not so much a specific policy change, but rather a mind-set change, which will lead subsequently to multiple policy changes. That could mean the difference between war in Syria, Iran, Cuba or Venezuela - or not. And it could mean the difference between educating our children or building another useless aircraft carrier.
The destruction of the right's monopoly in defining what may be discussed in our political discourse will also pay huge but subtle dividends in attitude shifts and what is possible in American politics today. The regressive program is discredited, and whether Obama turns out to be a liberal or a centrist, political space has now been opened up on the left for the first time since the 1970s. Movements to pull the Obama administration and the American public to the left now have a chance to flourish because of a combination of the right's failures, the public's desperation, the transparent and hideous idiocy of the Limbaugh-led regressive opposition to Obama, the absence of a necessity for the left to be continually fighting defensive battles against all manner of destructive policies under the Bush administration, and the right's new preoccupation with blocking Obama and the Democrats in Congress. Those energies can now be transferred in a more positive direction.
That will be especially productive if coupled with a newly politicized youth movement in this country. We already know that young people are registering Democratic in staggering numbers, and we know from past experience that that is likely to mean a lifetime of political allegiance. We can also hope that their mobilization in the 2008 election, and especially at this week's Power Shift conference and civil disobedience action, are the beginnings of a long-overdue movement toward - in the words of Patti Smith - wrestling the world from fools. Never has a young generation been given such a crappy deal by parents who claim to be devoted to their children but who, because of their astonishingly selfish political choices, in fact have been devoted entirely to themselves, often at the direct expense of their progeny. In any case, whether it comes from younger Americans or their elders, one of the quiet yet powerful consequences of our current political moment is that we can now open up political space on the left to begin making some sense again.
But it isn't only the content of American politics that will change in unseen but hugely consequential ways. Obama - quietly and subtly, in complete contrast to the bombastic fulminations of his predecessor - allows us to be smart again. If you ever need a barometer of the depth of American insecurity, just take a gander at how so many of us went for Bush and his lies and blunders, all because it made us feel good. Remember that line about how he was the candidate you'd rather have a beer with? Of course, now, because of his policies, the idiots who used criteria such as that one to choose their president can no longer even afford a beer, just at the moment they need it most, but you get the point. Bush and Bushism - AKA regressivism - catered to that sickest little aspect of our mentality, the idea that we could feel better about just how mediocre we are by putting a regular guy in the White House. And his whole ‘govern from the gut' thing played into that as well, in addition to providing the enormous side benefit (more likely, it was the other way around) of allowing the Bush people to justify as their choice the policy option they had already selected, despite any evidence - often rigorous, scientific evidence - to the contrary.
But smart is the new stupid in Washington. And even though that isn't in itself a particular policy change, it is the key to reorienting a host of policy changes. More importantly, as Obama returns us to the practice of following the best minds in making policy choices, rather than the overclass-driven gut preferences of a dry drunk former frat boy who got gentlemen's C's in college (that's where you actually got F's, but your daddy donates a building to the school), people will once again recognize how smart it is to be smart. I don't expect it to be easy in the future to put another tongue-tied cowboy master of malapropisms in the White House because it makes us feel good about feeling bad about ourselves. My guess is that people have now discovered that being hungry, homeless and jobless only makes feeling bad about being ordinary a whole lot worse.
Perhaps, more than anything, though, it will be changes to the character of our discourse that may provide the most profound effect of all. The single thing that excites me most about the Obama phenomenon is the manner in which he injects a long-missing grown-up maturity into that discourse. Jimmy Carter was probably the last American politician to talk to the public with this degree of honesty and sophistication. We weren't ready then, but after 30 years of the alternative and its consequences, it strikes me that we may be now.
To which I say, put aside all the legislation, policy discussions and executive orders - this may be the biggest single effect of the Obama years. Because if we can't talk about politics like adults, we'll never get an adult politics. If we can't discuss the massive debt implications to our children of slashing taxes, we'll just keep getting both. If we can't recall our own sickening past sins against the people of Iran, we'll continue to argue over whether it's best to adopt the really stupid approach to that country, or just the merely idiotic. If we can't be honest about class politics in America, the middle and working classes will continue to abet the wholesale transfer their own property to the already fabulously wealthy. If we can't discriminate between real science and junk dogma used to enrich oil companies, we'll continue to commit planetary suicide in the greatest act of destructive foolishness ever known.
Whatever one feels about Barack Obama's policies, watching his thoughtful, respectful and intelligent approach to the politics of our time provides a stunning contrast to the faux swagger, willful stupidity, and inherent contempt for the public of his predecessor. Even during the latter years of his own administration, watching tapes of Bush in his earlier years, announcing this or that invasion, threatening this or that adversary, could be a jaw-dropping experience for any mildly sentient creature. Imagine how pathetic they'll look in a year or two, after experiencing the Obama alternative, especially because the GOP keeps sending out junior versions of Junior (hard to imagine that's physically possible, isn't it?) like Limbaugh, Gingrich and Jindal to go up against the president.
I don't think Americans are ever going to want to go back to that sadly immature politics, any more than most adults ever crave a return to the fun days of adolescence. And this is huge. Make no mistake about it - regressivism not only thrives on an immature, two-dimensional, dumbed-down, bumper-sticker sized politics, it requires it. Creating an America in which the public demands a more intelligent and thoughtful political discourse automatically takes ninety percent of regressive arguments off the table before the discussion even begins - at least outside the hollows of Appalachia, the tabernacles of Utah, or the grubby currency shrines on Wall Street, where they either haven't gotten the message, or don't want it. An intelligent people who demand an intelligent politics will have no more interest in the kind of fear-based politics Karl Rove specializes in than they will in Zoroastrianism.
And, really, this may bring us to the best change of all. Anybody with a heart and a brain has spent so much of the last eight years (if not thirty) in a stupefied daze, gazing upon the knuckle-draggers of the right in action, and wondering in befuddled astonishment how this could be happening in twenty-first century America. Particularly for any of us with memories of the Sixties, who could have imagined back then a return to the Fifties, then to the nineteenth century, then to the seventeeth, and then to the thirteenth? It was if something was in the water, and everyone went on a decade(s) long bender, leaving a few of us somehow unaffected by anything other than grief and chagrin at the actions of the rest.
But I think that's over now. Welcome to the new American sobriety.
Yet the right still hasn't figured it out. Which is good. Because now, instead of bucking up our collective fear and insecurity, the sight of Sarah Palin, the rhetoric of John McCain, or the creepy monsters drawn to their political rallies is only enraging voters who were merely disillusioned yesterday, but are fast hurtling toward a furious anger today.
We seem to have reached the moment when the little dictator morphs from Hitler into Charlie Chaplin mocking Hitler.
Impoverished, deceived, broken and isolated, America is finally growing up.
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62 Comments so far
Show AllUntil fair money distribution during political campaigns is assured, nothing will change.
Our political system runs on money. Can you argue with this? Look at the last election. The candidates who won spent the most money.
It's all a bit of a tricky minefield. Even up candidate spending and then the PACs take over. Even that up and the pundits gain power and which candidates should get how much? Should I run and get a pile of money? Should you?
"Already he is reorienting America programmatically - ending the Iraq war, closing Guantánamo, building a national health care system, negotiating seriously on global warming, spending heavily on education, energy and infrastructure, and taking strides to reintroduce some small measure of economic justice to the country"
You lost me here and I stopped reading.
Leaving 50,000 troops in a country indefinitely, boosting another bound-to-quagmire war, keeping untried kidnapped people incarcerated for months more and in the hands of the same people that tortured them for years, figuring out how to keep the health care system profitable to and in the hands of the same people who have worked their damndest to keep it out of reach of more and more Americans, does not sound so much like a re-orientation as the re-design of a mask over what is essentially the same face, regardless of how much money is being packaged to be spent on infrastructure and education.
In my neck of the woods there are hordes of 18-to-30 year olds who have absolutely no prospects for anything other than signing up to help the surge in Afghanistan. Even MacDonald's jobs are at a premium. Many of these folks are smart and creative and deserve more than jobs building roads, just as we need them to rescue the country from outsourcing and brain drain and rebuilding our intellectual, visionary and can-do quotient at every level (and if you think they don't belong at Harvard and Yale and U of Chicago, then you might want to consider what the products of those esteemed facilities have wrought over the past ten to fifteen years in this country). Needless to say these are not the folks one would routinely run into at Hofstra University and I see no program in the offing that would get them there sooner rather than later, or at least before the east coast gets swallowed by ice cap melt. Okay, that's extreme, but really, they're lucky if they can put it together enough with the resources they have to get to the local community college... of course there's always black market narcotics.... now THAT's a booming business where I live.
And I'll wait to see how much of this designated money actually gets down to the folks and the projects that need it most.
I can see the skimmers now, on the horizon, like the land rush in Oklahoma.... "why look Marge! Isn't that the guy who sold us our balloon mortgage? How did he get a new Escalade? Watch out honey, crawl back into our little hole, he ain't gonna stop for nothing and no one is going to make him stop..." "Oh Harry... look there! Isn't that our senator? In the bulldozer? Making sure the road is repaired so the Escalade can get through all the homeless people? Wow... he must be really important!..."
Whew! What a windstorm. Blowing one way then t'other.
But what can you expect from a polly-sigher non-pareil?
You might try this for a more pointed p.o.v. on the (purported) freakin' topic:
http://www.newheadnews.com/harpers.slouka/index.html
nothing is revealed
Once again, DMG substitutes length for substance.
"...America is finally growing up."
If that were actually true, we wouldn't need a 'daddy' to tell us what to do. We would just do it.
My friend, you have said a mouthful and nailed it. The average American still needs permission to act...from the church, mommie, daddy, big brother, the media et al. We are still just TOO YOUNG to act independently or we have been de-educated...take your choice...result is the same...a nation of followers...sheeples. Sheeples who are so easily led through mass hypnosis.
"Anybody with a heart and a brain has spent so much of the last eight years (if not thirty) in a stupefied daze, gazing upon the knuckle-draggers of the right in action, and wondering in befuddled astonishment how this could be happening in twenty-first century America. Particularly for any of us with memories of the Sixties, who could have imagined back then a return to the Fifties, then to the nineteenth century, then to the seventeeth, and then to the thirteenth?"
Nicely put, David. I'm old enough to fall in the above category. I would say the
last 30 years has been like a bad acid trip, but I wouldn't want to give LSD a bad name. I think the last 30 years has been much worse than that.
"Already he is reorienting America programmatically - ending the Iraq war, closing Guantánamo, building a national health care system, negotiating seriously on global warming, spending heavily on education, energy and infrastructure, and taking strides to reintroduce some small measure of economic justice to the country. "
Got it? Do all of you anti-Obama maniacs understand? If you are a real progressive then stop sabotaging our chances for change by attacking Obama. He is the best President we've ever elected. So stop whining.
"In any case, once again, what we're talking about here is not so much a specific policy change, but rather a mind-set change, which will lead subsequently to multiple policy changes"
Obama is smarter than Bush. Doesn't that matter to any of you?!?! Even if some of the policies stay the same - Obama is smarter than Bush. Why is that so important?
"That could mean the difference between war in Syria, Iran, Cuba or Venezuela - or not. And it could mean the difference between educating our children or building another useless aircraft carrier. "
David Michael Green is not some cable TV pundit, he is a professor of political science at Hofstra University in New York, maybe you should listen to him, he knows what he's talking about. Great article.
Well ... I was just about to have an up-chuck re the article and committed to write a scathing riposte ... then I read your responses ... so I'll just say thank you ... thank you!!!
:)
I feel bad for most of you who have commented so far. Everything is shit and there is no hope. Is that a liberating feeling or what? Anyway ain't it fun to complain about hopelessness? Maybe we could come up with a plan that might help? We could endlessly investigate 9-11 (yeah, I know, I have questions too), we could build us some guillotines, we could move to a cave and pretend the clouds look like pie. Or we could stay in the real world and get to work making things better.
- Your comment reflects the attitude, so common among liberals, that one must always be relatively upbeat in one's overall assessment of what's going on, regardless of the objective conditions. That's the Obama-follower phenomenon in a nutshell -- "WE have the right to feel happy & hopeful! [regardless of whether there's any substantive basis for it]"
In other words, what's important is not reality, but professing to feel contented & "hopeful" about reality.
You write, "Or we could stay in the real world and get to work making things better."
- What does that mean, exactly? Does that mean saying happy things about Obama? Does it mean "supporting Democrats?" Does it mean overthrowing capitalism?
You might not realize it, but EVERYONE favors "getting to work to make things better." The first step in that process is developing an accurate appraisal of where we stand today, & how we got to this point. And your position is essentially complaining about people who want to do that!!
I look at it more from the perspective of one of my heroes: Chomsky. He notices the thick layer of shit that nearly engulfs everything, but he also notes how many things have improved a great deal in his lifetime. Sure, an "accurate appraisal" is necessary for some things, but most CDers understand that lots of needed stuff is really just common sense.
Chomsky is just a gatekeeper. Tells just enough truth to be believable, but stops way short, like on 9/11. People who see through the fog are pessimistic because the vast majority of people have their heads in the sand and refuse to accept the inconvenient truth. Until more people wake up, there really is no hope.
According to Plato, the Noble Lie is a tool of the ruling elite to keep a stable social structure. In politics a noble lie is a myth or untruth, often, but not invariably, of a religious nature, knowingly told by an elite to maintain social harmony, particularly the social position of that elite. Leo Strauss whom is widely admired by the ruling elite believed that men by their nature are inherently aggressive, and can only restrained by a powerful nationalist state (or a global state broken up into regions). "Because mankind is intrinsically wicked, he has to be governed. Such governance can only be established, however, when men are united – and they can only be united against other people." If no external threat exists then one has to be manufactured and presented as a noble lie. Be it terrorism (Al Qaeda is the common enemy), global warming (man itself is the enemy), whatever.
Obama apparently also is a believer in the Noble Lie. So until people wake up to this, nothing will change for the better, the poison will just have a different taste every 4-8 years.
A collection of famous truth quotes from various people may help those who seek the truth, inconvenient as it may be, and are not content to conform to the consensus of a majority who choose to believe in myths.
"The beginning of wisdom is found in doubting; by doubting we come to the question, and by seeking we may come upon the truth. In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act. Believe those who are seeking the truth. Doubt those who find it (detectable by the use of ad hominem attacks or other measures to protect their truth).
The enemy of the truth is very often not the lie - deliberate, contrived, and dishonest - but the myth-persistent, persuasive, and unrealistic.
Myths which are believed in tend to become true. The fact that a great many people believe something is no guarantee of its truth. Sanity is not truth. Sanity is [believing and] conforming to what is socially expected. Truth is sometimes in conformity, more often not."
Those who speak too much inconvenient truth tend to be called crackpots, insane, dangerous, etc. So don't say I didn't warn you.
You are a card, inconvenient truth. A moniker like that and you say global warming is a noble lie. You can't handle the truth! 'The beginning of wisdom is found in doubting...' Don't act like you know, your lack of wisdom begins to show.
So, the real world does not include the proper investigation of the criminal activity of the past eight years...starting with 9/11? If that be the case, in what world does JUSTICE exist??
Personally I think most of 9-11 was a look the other way kind of a deal; maybe less to investigate and sink your teeth into than one might think. Let's investigate the stuff that we know happened, that was directly in contervention of the Constitution and our laws. With Bush and the neocons we could investigate from now until doomsday. Let's limit it to the obvious stuff. There's plenty of that. If new actionable info should come up about 9-11, then by all means, go for it.
"maybe less to investigate and sink your teeth into than one might think"................NO...actually much, much more...start here ...........911dvdproject.com........and here's a few more ..and these are only a few.....
ae911truth.org
911sharethetruth.com
911weknow.com
stj911.org
911blogger.com
physics911.net
911research.com
infowars.com
wtc7.net
Too bad almost all the stuff on those sites is a bunch of half-truths and cherry-picking of facts combined with outdated "evidence".
"Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able? Then he is not omnipotent. Is he able, but not willing? Then he is malevolent. Is he both able and willing? Then whence cometh evil? Is he neither able nor willing? Then why call him God?" -Epicurus
I spent quite a bit of time looking into all this, and several of these web sights, a couple of years ago. Lots of interesting stuff, terrific amount of coincidence (?), but after all this time nothing to really grab onto and say "aha!"
Not enough time, yet _ G R E G
They're ( _ A H A s _ ) quite small ( "nothing to really grab onto" ), but also quite REAL :
1. microscoptic iron spheracles ( in the dust ),
2. nano-thermate extreme explosives and residues ( similar LLL R&D devas DIME used in Gaza, and close associations with Israeli use )
3. Packing of NIST with same LLL researchers ( as in 2. ), who ran _9_!_!_ Com-miss investigations
4. Physics of energy expended to collapse & pulverize WTC buildings is missing MegaJoules ( only possible reasonable explanation is explosives, especially with so many ear-witnesses and videos to it). Not to forget the molten steel seen and viewed from NASA orbiting sats, some 3 months later.
5. Conservation of momentum related to item 4 ( ¿ how many apples falling from trees, have you seen with an upward going arc -- like the dusts& debris followed ? ).
Namaste
I'm certainly no expert on this stuff--not even close, but it seems to me that if some of this stuff was truly fishy, more engineers and scientists would have expressed some surprise.
Yes _ G R E G _ R _, there is a considerable deficit of imagination and independent thinking, but much of it can be explained as:
1. Most scientists are funded almost exclusively through Federal grants for research, and biting the hand feeding them is not something smart people usually do.
2. Similarly for most engineers, the overall expectation is to align one's personal beliefs with both corporate and gov't beliefs -- especially with more than half of our economy dependent upon warmongering MIC and banksters.
3. The jacka$$ $ewer main $tream media ( with interlocking directorates with MIC & banksters ) is dedicated to making more money, with no regard for any ethics or morality -- and are actually paid very well by "secret" gov't propaganda policies and PSYOPs ( psychological warfare on the American people, paid for by our taxes ) to better control the beliefs and thinking of Americans. Can you say 'manufactured consensus' ?
http://www.sott.net/articles/show/178273-Obama-Democrats-bow-to-banks-on-housing-rescue-
4. Many of us now believe that a majority of all politicians and heads of Corporape America are linked in a common psychological diagnosis, of actually being PSYCHOPATHS ( http://www.cassiopaea.com/cassiopaea/psychopath.htm )
_____ http://www.serendipity.li/bush/madness.htm ______
5. Nonetheless, there is a widespread and emergent grassroots support of a large number of the scientists and engineers on various independent web sites seeking the truth of what has happened since _9_!_!_. Here's a web site with well over one thousand of those smartest and most aware professionals:
_____ http://www.patriotsquestion911.com/ _____
_____ http://www.sott.net/signs/signsguide.htm _____
Please do persevere, as the truth is "out there" -- and so far ( out ) as they would like you to believe …
Namaste
and the very latest endeavor to expose the lies of _ 9 _ ! _ ! _
_______ http://pl911truth.com/ ______
( Thanks to Mike Corbeil )
Namaste
Did you used to post as Enliven?
Yes,
presence, nspire, enliven, and many others …
¿ Are you recalling my posting about Moooing too ( with Anne Marie, as I'm kind of a mad - cow lover - too ) ?
See ___________ http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/11/21/5374#comments ____________
/ / / / / / / / / / / / / S T A R T / / / / / / / / / / / / /
nspire November 23rd, 2007 7:50 pm
HYBRIDOMA2001,
You've reminded me of the subtle tricks used in "Chicago of blood', to aid the finessing and passage of animals (dutiful domesticated USans) indubitably to their doom, but with luckless abandon.
You state that: "It's symbolic, in a way, of what the American Dream has become."
More so than you may already know.
Are any of you readers familiar with Temple Grandin's "Thinking in Pictures"? If not, please be wonderfully surprised and rewarding by going here
Beyond the exceptionally transforming and inspirational story of an autistic genius surviving and thriving, and the gifts of her disability (which in part I share) - which need be read by all - you will find a bizarre and unexpected story of the stockyards (what?).
Yes, the stockyards of a now more humanely guided ramp design, that Temple visualized as how to eliminate the foreknowledge of pending death. Immensely successful (and profitable to the owners), her signature design has been incorporated into almost half of all stockyards.
My reason for bringing this forward to discuss is the insidiously clever design is so simple, as to just add a curving wall, so that the herd cannot see the deaths of those ahead of them, which would otherwise create hormone'ically tainted product (adrenaline surging, yucking with the meat's goodness). OK, this is a stretch from a vegetarian's perspective, but diminished customer value and loss of profit is not.
MOOOOOO'ing loudly, some of us in the herd can see the agents-of-death right there before us clearly, but then the media circus installs the curved wall (effects) to deflect our cries and sight from others, so that "progress" (death, war) can continue unimpeded.
Didn't Chicago have another famous cow story of evidently significant note: the great Chicago Fire (1871) was (previously) blamed on a cow thought to have kicked over a lantern in Mrs. O'Leary's barn. Perhaps that wonderfully brilliant and committed cow, was but attempting the burn those stockyards to the ground?
Shouldn't we first tear down our own curved walls, raise the torch high, and allow others to see for themselves what LIES before USans?
/ / / / / / / / / / / / / E N D / / / / / / / / / / / / /
Namaste « Presence »
« We must be the change we wish to see in the world » — Gandhi
« There is a sufficiency in the world for man’s need but not for man’s greed » — Gandhi
« We adopt the means of nonviolence because our end is a community at peace with itself » — ML King
I love that MOOOOOO'ing bit. I remember your eye catching symbols that direct ones thoughts along alternate paths. That, and your Namaste ending. I'm glad to see you're still around...
Try this one.......www.ae911truth.org. If it fails to stimulate any interest, than I'll say what my friend uses as a signature on his emails............
"You can't awaken a person who is pretending to be asleep." Chinese Proverb
I'll have a look, thanks.
I thought this was okay until I read this:
"We had nasty King George III - over two centuries ago, mind you - whose greatest crime seems to have been imposing taxes on the colonists without letting them vote on the legislation. Bummer, man. A sub-optimal governance system, to be sure. But this in a world which has given us Stalin, Mao, Hitler and Pol Pot - each of whom have eradicated millions of their own people - let alone a plethora of your garden-variety thuggish dictators ranging from Pinochet to the Shah to Marcos and Sudan's al-Bashir. Given the relative levels of oppression - not to mention lethality - in these and scads of other cases compared to the American experience, even our revolution let alone our raging and congenital public antipathy toward government seem pretty silly."
and I couldn't continue. Does this guy realize that the Shah, Pinochet and Marcos were our dictators? We installed them with the help of the CIA and watched silently as they destroyed democratic institutions and made their countries safe for our corporations. And this fool is teaching college students?
This author represents about 20% of CD posters who are wired in to the corporate, military industrial hegemony that runs things in the US including Obama. Their existence is to offer a Democratic Apologetic. That is what they do: the true believers of corporate dominance. You will never get a dialectic from these people because they are entrenched elites married to status quo policies that change nothing.
DMG's title is apt for unintended reasons, because his writing is both smart & stupid at the same time.
The above article exemplifies the quintessential liberal viewpoint. It starts from the assumption that American politics is basically a matter of Democrats and Republicans. It then notes that Democrats aren't as blatantly stupid-sounding as Republicans, & concludes on this basis that Democrats should be seen as the force that will rescue us from the Republican barbarians.
Nothing could be further from the truth. Obama came to prominence precisely because powerful elites recognized that his brainier style would quickly disarm & pacify the liberal half of the population, even while his policies favored the same interests who did so well under Bush. Green writes, for example, "...Whatever one feels about Barack Obama's policies, watching his thoughtful, respectful and intelligent approach to the politics of our time provides a stunning contrast to the faux swagger, willful stupidity, and inherent contempt for the public of his predecessor."
- That's precisely what elites wanted the public to think about Obama. (Mission Accomplished!!) Meanwhile, the class war, as well as the "War on Terror" and other US wars go on as before. Virtually every Obama decision on domestic matters favors Wall St, while every foreign policy decision represents gains for the forces of militarism & imperialism.
What this demonstrates about liberals is that they despised Bush, not because he was a liar & a murderer, but because his style was crude. He didn't speak or look intelligent, & therefore wasn't able to rule on behalf of the plutocracy in a way that made middle class liberals feel good about themselves. Liberals want to be talked pretty to, while they're being screwed. They don't mind the screwing, as long as it's done tastefully, with proper decorum observed.
I agree.
I'm amazed by the degree to which DMG vacillates from week to week.
This one has a "whistling past the graveyard" quality. Green is trying too hard to be half-full, to accentuate the positive and eliminate the negative.
So he glosses over Obama's straightforward neoliberalism, deference to Wall Street and the financial elites, militarism, and exceptionalism including wholesale adoption of the fictitious premises, lexicon, and marketing strategies to the Global War on Terror.
FWIW, it so happens that my siblings fully vindicate your analysis. I happened to have dinner last week with my older sister and brother, a trio aged 53, 56, and 59.
As I only fully realized during the late and unlamented presidential campaign, they are essentially good-hearted liberals who pretty much take for granted that the present structure of government and the political process, i.e. the entrenched duopoly, is sound. Susceptible to abuse and malfunction, perhaps, but essentially sound.
It was the night after Obama's pseudo-State of the Union address, and my sibs chatted gently and approvingly of Obama's performance. Naturally, they noted the welcome contrast between the articulate and sophisticated incumbent and the incoherent abomination who preceded him. Who could argue with that?
I couldn't bring myself to say much-- of course, that was partly because I am unable to watch such Satanic Follies. So I busied myself in slurping my soup-- an excellent duck barley soup; I'd never had it before-- until the conversation turned to something more elevating.
They both supported and voted for Obama, but not nearly as zealously or fervently as some who post here. So I don't think that they're utterly enthralled. But, as you note, they respond very positively to what they perceive as intellectual and administrative competence.
Now, it's a given that I'm a couple of standard deviations away from the cozy center of the bell curve. But when I listen to Obama, I don't get all warm and runny inside as Green and my siblings seem to. He often comes across to me as a mildly prissy and imperious speaker, and he comfortably employs the standard lexicon of political blather, banality, and ad-copy apothegms and slogans. I gag at such things, insofar as they are patently anti-intellectual and fictitious.
This is entirely consistent with my view that politicians in contemporary Amerika are by definition professional Bullshitters™.
But again, my siblings are immune to this sort of criticism; if I voiced it, they would most likely point out with mild surprise and perhaps a hint of reproof that sure, Obama has to reassure wary and ill-served citizens that he's an OK guy; bullshitting is a GIVEN! But he's so incredibly ABLE that it's stupid to judge him on that kind of superficial stuff.
Apparently Green thinks so, too. Handsome is as handsome does, I say.
· Yr Obd't Servant
good post. was madcow among your siblings? when confronted w/an articulate, thoughtful vignette about the libtard mind set, all they can say is: you are a cynic.
Thanks, taint.
If madcow's reply was intended as a put-down, it glanced off harmlessly. For one thing, in Amerikan popular culture "cynicism" is regarded as Bad-- it's a kind of "gatekeeper" vice that leads to Compulsive Negativity, Nihilism, and Apathy. After all, it's not a particularly intellectual popular culture, is it?
So it may very well be true that over the years, as one comes to understand and accept the gift of one's own robust cynicism, one may indeed come off as a "proud" cynic-- exactly as one may shake off the cultural stigmas of race and sexual identity by becoming a "proud" black, gay, etc. person.
So, I'll plead "nolo contendere" to the charge.
But apart from that, how is wearing cynicism as a badge of honor any different from wearing credulity or optimism or blind trust as badges of honor?
I believe that madcow, of all people, really understands this. How many times has madcow contended in vain to take down DaveBronstein, only to have her arguments routinely dismembered until the last thing to be seen is madcow's arm slipping below the dark waters, but holding aloft the badge of rebellion ("but yet it moves!"), like the Excalibur-wielding Lady of the Lake in reverse-- finally descending unseen, but not conquered, into the murky depths.
· Yr Obd't Servant
Two brilliant and hilarious posts YOS...!
I particularly enjoyed the imagery from the Arthurian legend...
You wear your cynicism as a badge of honor.
Well said DB...
I was having a similar conversation with a friend yesterday about the good cop/bad cop R & D routine...
How Clinton was able to pass legislation that the repubes could never do, since he was a dem he got a pass from the liberal constituency... Nafta, welfare reform, WTO, Bosnia, etc...
The power elite learned long ago that if there was only repube after repube... The people would wake up to the charade....
Carter, Clinton, and Owebama are all members of the CFR, and play a vital role in the neoliberal side of the equation for the globalist agenda through the WB/IMF/WTO and selective "humanitarian aid"... The proverbial "carrot"...
The neoconservatives also work to carry out the globalist agenda, by carrying the "stick"... Pre-emptive war abroad, class war at home...
The reason that so many people reject this reality as a "conspiracy theory" is that it makes people feel powerless... That their vote is meaningless (w/in the two party duopoly, this is true)... That "Hope & Change" is merely rhetoric and spin to fool the liberals, in the same way that "compassionate conservatism" fools the christian fundamentalists...
However, once one transcends the smoke and mirrors of the body politic... It is actually an empowering paradigm... Since you are free from the predictable pidgeon-hole dichotomy of Dem vs. Repube... And are no longer a reactionary from either camp, struggling within a pre-ordained system that coopts and marginalizes any resistance or dissidence... You can "vote" your conscience, while working on creating a new model of reality that transcends the old either/or mentality by building localized economies and strengthening communities through work-trade, cooperatives, cottage industries, permaculture, and referendum...
Yes, that's it exactly!
right on DaveB.
but you left out one important thing: bush is a republican. obama is a democrat. for far too many people, that label was all that mattered.
So, in other words, it's hopeless. We can never get a truly good President because anyone who gets there will have been approved by the evil corporate powers that really run our country. It's all a farce and anyone who believes that we can make any progress within the American system is a fool. Any progress anyone claims is just a reflection of their own gullibility to the propaganda and the slick PR campaign.
I'm so glad we have people like you DB who see beyond the facade and who can set us all straight.
wow. pointing out that progressive change will not happen b/c obama (or anyone else) is in office makes one a hopeless cynic.
did you even watch the last prez. campaign? 3 candidates represented the possiblity of even small changes in the way the u.s. operates (paul, kucinich, gravel). they were laughed off the stage and ignored. so yeah, evil corporate powers run the country. presidential politics are a farce and no progress at all will be made on that front.
sorry that the truth sounds so "hopeless". you can now go back to drinking that hope & change koolaid.
So, by your argument, when the media tries to sideline you, it's a sign that you're a threat to the powers that be. Okay, I agree with that.
Do you remember how the media fixated on Rev. Wright (playing those loops of him over and over again) and how it very nearly destroyed the Obama campaign? Just like they did with the Howard Dean screech. The only thing that saved Obama was the speech he gave on racism in America.
By your own argument this shows us that Obama is a threat to the powers that be.
right. obama's willingness to completely disown a long-standing friend, mentor, religious compatriot, etc. shows what a threat to power obama is.
not ONE TIME did obama even say jeremiah wright has the RIGHT to say whatever he wants, much less debate anything of substance in wright's positions.
when wright became inconvenient, he kicked him to the curb.
of such stuff are heros made.
you are so easily satisfied madcow.
He backed Wright up until it became political suicide to continue. Wouldn't we all rather our politicians not be politicians---maybe it's a bit much to ask for in todays climate. I notice you opted out of actually responding to my point.
My point again, in case you missed it: The media hit job done to Obama during the campaign proves that Obama is a threat to the establishment.
"...The media hit job done to Obama during the campaign proves that Obama is a threat to the establishment..."
- Horse pucky. Do you think the "Swift Boaters" episode proved John Kerry was a "Threat to the Establishment"?
The Rev Wright furor was simply part of the normal vetting process whereby the Establishment puts leading Democratic candidates through their paces. They scrutinize each candidate before deciding to entrust to him or her, the power of the presidency. They apply "stress tests" to what they perceive as areas of potential unreliability.
Furthermore, the Republican side (& their supporters in the media) certainly wanted to go after the Rev Wright & Bill Ayers stuff. If Hillary had been the Dem candidate, they would have gone after her areas of potential unreliability as well. (For instance, she once kissed Yassir Arafat's wife. This would have become a big "issue," had Hillary been the nominee.)
All Democrats are given this kind of scrutiny by the media. It's completely normal and traditional. Republicans do not get the same kind of scrutiny, because they are capitalism's "A Team." Republicans are regarded as being beyond any possible doubt, in terms of "loyalty" and patriotism. What this really means is that the Republican Party is the direct representative of the US ruling class, so they are accorded certain privileges in media coverage.
Democrats, by contrast, are always regarded by the hard Right as possible traitors. For instance, Bill Clinton was attacked by Daddy Bush in 1992 because he visited Moscow once while a graduate student in England. This does not mean Bill C was a "threat to the Establishment." All Democrats get this same treatment, because Democrats are only capitalism's "B Team." They don't get the same privileges as the A Team.
M A D C O W,
I certainly do relish having a "threat to the establishment" and apparently liberal figure head to our gov't -- but I would caution you as to using simple 1st order logic in describing the jacka$$ $ewer Main $tream Media and associated PSYOPS agenda.
With all of the _ 9 _ ! _ ! _ crap and purposely floated exaggerated inconsistencies ( dis & mis- information ) , we should all take pause when anything comes out "in media", which now clearly includes the blogsphere and so many wanna be pundidiots.
My point is that my BS alarms have been cynically firing for 2 years about the manufactured digestibility of much more liberal ( and off-the-charts different appearances ). Oh how lucky we've been to have two women and a black man provided to us as possible Prez and VP, this means that we've come "so far" from those long ago days -- when some people voted for shrubish ( he was never elected ).
Come on -- wake up -- and smell the ( possible ) contrivance and view the subtlety offered choices, that essentially played into the rara'ing crowds so carefully constructed to sway the masses.
Indubitably, any thinking individual is "a threat to the establishment", but I suspect the role of a lifetime for actor Ronald Reagan was neither the beginning nor ending of the concerted attacks ( of the CIA and others ) to formulate the American populous ( attention & mentality ) to more malleable forms and better consistency toward meeting those wicked objectives of the power and greed crazed elites.
¿ Perhaps the ( hidden ) purpose of the "media hit job", was to instill a sense of exactly what you noticed -- to ameliorate people's natural suspicions of Obama being O'reo ( establishment inner finger licking good ) ?
I cheer and enjoy every liberal and progressive movement, even the smallest nudges, but nonetheless still smell a large infestation of warmongering greedy rats ( behind the scenes, sometimes not at all well hidden ). As they say, hiding in plain sight is a great place to never be found ( out ).
I'm M'OOOOOing at the stink of death and illegitimate un-Constitutionality re-framed ( in a so much nicer "frame" than before … ). I do like his authentically appearing smile, and sufficiently vague generalities ( God and Motherhood, as it were ) -- but the specifics and actions are all too 'familiar' -- for this dysfunctional American "family".
The more dysfunctional, the more stringent the familiar roles become. We EAGERLY await the demonstration of better flexibility and actual adaptive changes to our collective benefit ( and obviously the reverse, to those who caused and already have profited egregiously … ).
Namaste
"...We can never get a truly good President because anyone who gets there will have been approved by the evil corporate powers that really run our country. It's all a farce and anyone who believes that we can make any progress within the American system is a fool. Any progress anyone claims is just a reflection of their own gullibility to the propaganda and the slick PR campaign..."
- Yes, despite your sarcastic intent, that's pretty much the size of it. How could it be otherwise when only 2 parties are allowed, and both represent big business?
A particularly accurate phrase you used was "anyone who believes that we can make any progress within the American system is a fool." That's quite correct, because the "American system" just means capitalism, with political control exercised via the duopoly. That kind of system only allows one outcome -- continued domination by big money.
So you blame it on the 2 party system? How about a country like Israel---they have 12 parties running in their elections. Do they seem at all progressive?
An incredibly unserious remark, for several reasons.
First, if I say "X is bad," this hardly implies that "Anything besides X is good."
Second, if I say that it's bad when there are only TWO parties, and both are big-business parties, this certainly does not mean that having 3, or 7, or 9 parties is necessarily "good." It would depend what those other parties were. If all of them were big business parties, or if some of them were religious-fanatic parties (or chauvinist settler parties, in Israel's case), this clearly would not be an improvement over having just 2 big business parties.
Finally, Israel's politics must be discussed in the context of Israel. (The above discussion is about the US, not Israel.) And one of the most important things about Israel is that it is what it is, because of its relationship with the US. Without the many years of financing & other kinds of support from the US, Israel would hardly be the little monster that it is today.
Okay, I concede the point. But I would argue that we DO have more than 2 parties here---the Libertarian and the Green come to mind---that don't get the traction that the two major parties do. Likely it's because the corporate media shuts them out.
Regardless, I think our present system---the capitalist duopoly---flawed though it is, can produce progressive change. With a few reforms---media, corporate personhood and electoral inclusiveness come to mind---I think the we could go very far. The constitution is a wonderful blueprint that has brought much progress to the world. The national security state we erected after WWII has ensured the dominance of the MIC, but I believe it's all reversible within the confines of our capitalist system.
"confines of our capitalist system"...
With the invisible prison walls of wage slavery and debt...
and the very real prison walls of the for-profit prison system...
Never was a phrase so accurate...
However, capitalism is an economic system...
A Republic is a governmental system...
Democracy is an electoral system...
The dumbing down of the American electorate has been successful...
since most people can no longer differentiate these concepts...
Thank you G O L D E N _ M E A N
Jon Stewart interviewed Sandra Day O'Connor recently, and that 50% of school population is no longer even receiving a bare minimum of civics instruction ( so she's started a web site … ), as a result of NCLB ( not having this aspect on the tests ).
I recall she said that over 70% of Americans surveyed, are far _ f a r _ less knowledgeable than that, as they
cannot even
_____ n_a_m_e
_____ the
_____ three
_____ b_r_a_n_c_h_e_s
of gov't any longer !.
Namaste
Good point GoldenMean. Thanks....
'Growing Up' for America will be realized when the citizens have grown up enough to understand and accept the GodAwfulTruth that our government is not and has never had our best interests in mind. We are spoon fed lies and half truths and molly coddled with platitudes to keep us at lesst malable. Imagine a scenario where we are suddenly made aware of the truth about 9/11 and all of the other consiracies. The same people who believe the 'official' story will continue to believe it and the people who know darn well that it was an inside job will be able to say "I told you so." If our government can not even hold someone who refuses to testify before Congress in contempt of court then who would hold the perpatrators behind 9/11 accountable? AS Barbara Bush once said, No need to clutter a beautiful mind with such nonsense.
Resignation will get us NO WHERE. Keep up the fight!
America is finally growing up?....without a word about JUSTICE regarding the last eight years of criminality? The idea of "finally growing up" after this Disney World essay is simply another illusion within the illusion. Start with the truth of 9/11 and we can begin to talk about some sign of maturity. The TRUTH will set the country free...until then...as many have said....it's all built on a foundation of sand. And all the glorious rhetoric and "hope" is just that....words of smoke....
I agree. Read Professor David Ray Griffin's book The New Pearl Harbor: The Truth about 911. Apparently the only thing Obama can offer is covering up the Bush crimes.
And then when you're done reading that book, read Griffin's "The 9/11 Commission Report: Omissions and Distortions" and "Debunking 9/11 Debunking". Those are the original three books he wrote on the subject and are a WEALTH of researched information on why the official story is hogwash.
Thanks to all...I have read all these books.....I would refer you to the 911dvdproject.com..............
Don't you just love the Democratic/Obama apologists on this site who spin tale tales of obfuscation? Obama is NOT ending the Iraq occupation he is perpetuating it by leaving 50K troops in the country. He is also escalating Afghanistan by increased troop deployments despite the fact that every occupying force over the last 1500 years has been defeated through attrition. He is engaged in a covert war in Pakistan that has already claimed the lives of innocent women and children striking villages with large non combatant populations. He is owned by the coal industry who is using his assertion about "clean coal" which any authentic environmentalist will tell you is a lie. Clean coal does not exist. Obama has demonstrated that he is nothing more than Bush lite riding a marketing schema over substance in favor of photo ops. Astonishing how the wannabe left like this Cat looks more and more like the right in their defense of garbage policies.
elohim,
Yeah, this is my thought, too. What the hell is he talking about? This is a long article of obfuscation and disinformation.
I wonder if the thought police have paid him a visit?