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Our Wars Are Killing Us
Pentagon Time: Tick…Tick…Tick…
Back in 2007, when General David Petraeus was the surge commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, he had a penchant for clock imagery. In an interview in April of that year, he typically said: "I'm conscious of a couple of things. One is that the Washington clock is moving more rapidly than the Baghdad clock, so we're obviously trying to speed up the Baghdad clock a bit and to produce some progress on the ground that can perhaps give hope to those in the coalition countries, in Washington, and perhaps put a little more time on the Washington clock." And he wasn't alone. Military spokespeople and others in the Bush administration right up to the president regularly seemed to hear one, two, or sometimes as many as three clocks ticking away ominously and out of sync.
Hearing some discordant ticking myself of late, I decided to retrieve Petraeus's image from the dustbin of history. So imagine three ticking clocks, all right here in the U.S., one set to Washington time, a second to American time, and the third to Pentagon time.
In Washington -- with even the New York Times now agreeing that a "majority" of 100 is 60 (not 51) and that the Senate's 41st vote settles everything -- the clock seems to be ticking erratically, if at all. On the other hand, that American clock, if we're to believe the good citizens of Massachusetts, is ticking away like a bomb. Americans are impatient, angry, and "in revolt" against Washington time. That's what the media continue to tell us in the wake of last week's Senate upset.
Depending on which account you read, they were outraged by a nearly trillion dollar health-care reform that was also a giveaway to insurance companies, and annoyed by Democratic candidate Martha Coakley calling Curt Schilling a "Yankees fan" as well as besmirching handshaking in the cold outside Fenway Park; they were anxious about an official Massachusetts unemployment rate of 9.4% (and a higher real one), an economy that has rebounded for bankers but not for regular people, soaring deficits, staggering foreclosure rates, mega-banking bonuses, the Obama administration's bailout of those same bankers, and its coziness with Wall Street. They were angry and impatient about a lot of things, blind angry you might say, since they were ready to vote back into office the party not in office, even if behind that party's "new face" were ideas that would take us back to the origins of the present disaster.
A Blank Check for the Pentagon
It's worth noting, however, that they're not angry about everything -- and that the Washington clock, barely moving on a wide range of issues, is still ticking away when it comes to one institution. The good citizens of Massachusetts may be against free rides and bailouts for many types, but not for everybody. I'm speaking, of course, about the Pentagon, for which Congress has just passed a record new budget of $708 billion (with an Afghan war-fighting supplemental request of $33 billion, essentially a bail-out payment, still pending but sure to pass). This happened without real debate, much public notice, or even a touch of anger in Washington or Massachusetts. And keep in mind that the Pentagon's real budget is undoubtedly close to a trillion dollars, without even including the full panoply of our national security state.
The tea-party crews don't rail against Pentagon giveaways, nor do Massachusetts voters grumble about them. Unfettered Pentagon budgets pass in the tick-tock of a Washington clock and no one seems fazed when the Wall Street Journal reveals that military aides accompanying globe-hopping parties of congressional representatives regularly spend thousands of taxpayer dollars on snacks, drinks, and other "amenities" for them, even while, like some K Street lobbying outfit, promoting their newest weaponry. Think of it, in financial terms, as Pentagon peanuts shelled out for actual peanuts, and no one gives a damn.
It's hardly considered news -- and certainly nothing to get angry about -- when the Secretary of Defense meets privately with the nation's top military-industrial contractors, calls for an even "closer partnership," and pledges to further their mutual interests by working "with the White House to secure steady growth in the Pentagon's budgets over time." Nor does it cause a stir among the denizens of inside-the-Beltway Washington or the citizens of Massachusetts when the top ten defense contractors spend more than $27 million lobbying the federal government, as in the last quarter of 2009 (a significant increase over the previous quarter), just as plans for the president's Afghan War surge were being prepared.
Nor is it just the angry citizens of Massachusetts, or those tea-party organizers, or Republicans stalwarts who hear no clock ticking when it comes to "national security" expenditures, who see no link between our military-industrial outlays, our perpetual wars, and our economic woes. When, for instance, was the last time you saw a bona fide liberal economist/columnist like Paul Krugman include the Pentagon and our wars in the litany of things potentially bringing this country down?
Yes, striking percentages of Americans attend the church (temple, mosque) of their choice, but when it comes to American politics and the economy, the U.S. military is our church, "national security" our Bible, and nothing done in the name of either can be wrong.
Talk about a blank check. It's as if the military, already the most revered institution in the country, existed on the other side of a Star-Trekkian financial wormhole.
Pentagon Time Horizons
Which brings us to Pentagon time. Yes, that third clock is ticking, but at a very different tempo from those in Washington or Massachusetts.
Americans
are evidently increasingly impatient for "change" of whatever sort,
whether you can believe in it or not. The Pentagon, on the other hand,
is patient. It's opted for making counterinsurgency the central
strategy of its war in Central and South Asia, the sort of strategy
that, even if successful, experts claim could easily take a decade or
two to pull off. But no problem -- not when the Pentagon's clock is
ticking on something like eternal time.
And here's the thing: because the media are no less likely to give the Pentagon a blank check than the citizens of Massachusetts, it's hard indeed to grasp the extent to which that institution, and the military services it represents, are planning and living by their own clock. Though major papers have Pentagon "beats," they generally tell us remarkably little, except inadvertently and in passing, about Pentagon time.
So, for the next few minutes, just keep that Pentagon clock ticking away in your head. In the meantime, we'll go looking for some hints about the Pentagon's war-fighting time horizons buried in news reports on, and Pentagon contracts for, the Afghan War.
Take, as a start, a January 6th story from the inside pages of my hometown paper. New York Times reporter Eric Schmitt began it this way: "The military's effort to build a seasoned corps of expert officers for the Afghan war, one of the highest priorities of top commanders, is off to a slow start, with too few volunteers and a high-level warning to the armed services to steer better candidates into the program, according to some senior officers and participants." At stake was an initiative "championed" by Afghan War commander General Stanley McChrystal to create a "912-member corps of mostly officers and enlisted service members who will work on Afghanistan and Pakistan issues for up to five years."
The news was that the program, in its infancy, was already faltering because it didn't conform to one of the normal career paths followed in the U.S. military. But what caught my eye was that phrase "up to five years." Imagine what it means for the war commander, backed by key figures in the Pentagon, to plan to put more than 900 soldiers, including top officers, on a career path that would leave them totally wedded, for five years, to war in the Af-Pak theater of operations. (After all, if that war were to end, the State Department might well take charge.) In other words, McChrystal was creating a potentially powerful interest group within the military whose careers would be wedded to an ongoing war with a time-line that extended into 2015 -- and who would have something to lose if it ended too quickly. What does it matter then that President Obama was proclaiming his desire to begin drawing down the war in July 2011?
Or consider the plan being proposed, according to Ann Scott Tyson, in a January 17th Washington Post piece, by Special Forces Major Jim Gant, and now getting a most respectful hearing inside the military. Gant wants to establish small Special Forces teams that would "go native," move into Afghan villages and partner up with local tribal leaders -- "one tribe at a time," as an influential paper he wrote on the subject was entitled. "The U.S. military," reported Tyson, "would have to grant the teams the leeway to grow beards and wear local garb, and enough autonomy in the chain of command to make rapid decisions. Most important, to build relationships, the military would have to commit one or two teams to working with the same tribe for three to five years, Gant said." She added that Gant has "won praise at the highest levels [of the U.S. military] for his effort to radically deepen the U.S. military's involvement with Afghan tribes --- and is being sent back to Afghanistan to do just that." Again, another "up to five year" commitment in Afghanistan and a career path to go with it on a clock that, in Gant's case, has yet to start ticking.
Or just to run through a few more examples:
* In August 2009, the superb Walter Pincus of the Washington Post quoted Air Force Brigadier General Walter Givhan, in charge of training the Afghan National Army Air Corps, this way: "Our goal is by 2016 to have an [Afghan] air corps that will be capable of doing those operations and the things that it needs to do to meet the security requirements of this country." Of course, that six-year timeline includes the American advisors training that air force. (And note that Givhan's 2016 date may actually represent slippage. In January 2008, when Air Force Brig. Gen. Jay H. Lindell, who was then commander of the Combined Air Power Transition Force, discussed the subject, he spoke of an "eight-year campaign plan" through 2015 to build up the Afghan Air Corps.)
* In a January 13th piece on Pentagon budgeting plans, Anne Gearan and Anne Flaherty of the Associated Press reported: "The Pentagon projects that war funding would drop sharply in 2012, to $50 billion" from the present at least $159 billion (mainly thanks to a projected massive draw-down of forces in Iraq), "and remain there through 2015." Whether the financial numbers are accurate or not, the date is striking: again a five-year window.
* Or take the "train and equip" program aimed at bulking up the Afghan military and police, which will be massively staffed with U.S. military advisors (and private security contractors) and is expected to cost at least $65 billion. It's officially slated to run from 2010-2014 by which time the combined Afghan security forces are projected to reach 400,000.
* Or consider a couple of the long-term contracts already being handed out for Afghan war work like the $158 million the Air Force has awarded to Evergreen Helicopters, Inc., for "indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity (IDIQ) contract for rotary wing aircraft, personnel, equipment, tools, material, maintenance and supervision necessary to perform passenger and cargo air transportation services. Work will be performed in Afghanistan and is expected to start Apr. 3, 2009, to be completed by Nov. 30, 2013." Or the Pentagon contract awarded to the private contractor SOS International primarily for translators, which has an estimated completion date of September 2014.
Ending the Pentagon's Free Ride
Of course, this just scratches the surface of long-term Afghan War planning in the Pentagon and the military, which rolls right along, seemingly barely related to whatever war debates may be taking place in Washington. Few in or out of that city find these timelines strange, and indeed they are just symptomatic of an organization already planning for "the next war" and the ones after that, not to speak of the next generation bomber of 2018, the integrated U.S. Army battlefield surveillance system of 2025, and the drones of 2047.
This, in short, is Pentagon time and it's we who fund that clock which ticks toward eternity. If the Pentagon gets in trouble, war-fighting or otherwise, we bail it out without serious debate or any of the anger we saw in the Massachusetts election. No one marches in the streets, or demands that Pentagon bailouts end, or votes ‘em (or at least their supporters) out of office.
In this way, no institution is more deeply embedded in American life or less accountable for its acts; Pentagon time exists enswathed in an almost religious glow of praise and veneration -- what might once have been known as "idolatry." Until the Pentagon is forced into our financial universe, the angry, impatient one where most Americans now live, we're in trouble. Until candidates begin losing because angry Americans reject our perpetual wars, and the perpetual war-planning that goes with them, this sort of thinking will simply continue, no matter who the "commander-in-chief" is or what he thinks he's commanding.
It's time for Americans to stop saluting and end the Pentagon's free ride before America's wars kill us.




54 Comments so far
Show AllA long but worthwhile read. I've been personally protesting the military investment (and attitude) since 1961. I joined the War Resisters League after hearing about it in an Air Force training video presented at USAFA. I've marched and stood on street corners at home and in Washington and yelled at Cheney, etc.
People in general think such activities as mine border on traitorous, especially since we all, "Stand Together" and "Support Our Troops" after 9/11. America was defeated by its own fear.
"It's time for Americans to stop saluting and end the Pentagon's free ride before America's wars kill us." The clock that shows Pentagon time doesn't run on electricity. It runs on fear. It's way past time for us to teach each other the real difference between courage and cowardice. It's way past time to deal with, wrestle down, and control the inner spook.
Neither the military personnel nor the fire-fighters of America have a hedge on heroism.
Didn't get you anywhere did it? About as useless as John the Baptist going to Herod. So my plan is just to keep paying my 'Bills" in your world until I die. Then I won't need your God of Green Paper, or have to render unto Caesar anymore in order to live my life as Caesar doesn't rule the Kingdom of Heaven.
That's my plan. It's not much a plan I admit but it's the only thing I have going for myself at all. Seen your world & I don't want it.
Life is good. What an experience! It's always best to forgive.
That is pretty much my own plan. I'm sixty. I won't see the worst of what's coming. At least I hope not. I apologize for what "our world" has done to your people. I wish I'd never been born into "our world" from time to time.
"Neither the military personnel nor the fire-fighters of America have a hedge on heroism." Well-said, dwyerj1!
For me, the true heroes in America are our teachers, especially elementary teachers, who toil each day and yet are mercilessly criticized and underpaid for their efforts. Add to that the LPN's and Orderlies in our hospitals and nursing homes, and in fact care-givers of every profession.
Every time I see someone on tv kow-towing to "our troops" it makes me wanna gag.
What do you mean "Our Wars?" This old Indian isn't at war with anyone. Your Nation may be at war with lots of people on the earth in many various ways, but what does that have to do with me exactly?
I just live the way the Europeans conquerers of this land told us we have to live. Not to many other options in life now. What your Nation does or doesn't do upon the earth doesn't have even a single thing to do with me personally.
Heck you probably won't even have "Shakes the Clown" as the Superbowl Halftime entertainment.
As your living in their Walt Dismal Simpson's world.
Just another day closer to my journey being completed through your world.
Life is good. What an experience! It's always best to forgive.
How can you keep saying 'Life is good'? Who's life?
I respect you more than you can imagine, but what's the man ever done for you? Me? The nation?
I wish there were an enemy to fight, but he is all around in the air we breathe.
Leave it, NOW!
I remember the news story that was generated by CBS investigative reporting the week before 9/11. The Pentagon had "misplaced" 2.3 to 3 trillion dollars!!! Donald Rumsfeld was on the hotseat in front of the news media. The summary? Ooopsie! He could not account for it. And somehow, all of that good investigative reporting went down the tubes the following week when the 9/11 catastrophe happened.
Things haven't changed. They are always doing less that professional bookeeping. At any given moment, that can shake loose all the "spare change" and come up with a few billion dollars to fund their own black ops in total secrecy.
It is time we put America first and foremost in our resources. Who needs over 750 military bases world wide? Who needs to be a world power investing American lives and resources on the other side of the planet?
That clock is ticking . . . just like a time bomb.
Some famous general, having sustained heavy losses in a battle said "Another such victory and the war will be lost."
What the hell are we doing waging war against people who can't fight
back? The cost is ruinous at a time when we have citizens starving.
Leaving aside the moral dimensions of the folly, what do we hope to gain? International goodwill? Sand? This military model of empire is killing us. Who is behind this insanity?
No individual would do such a thing. What happens when groupthink starts making decisions?
According to the Great Book, where we are going will be so sweet and pleasant--not touched by evil or sin--perfect in every way--but that should never prevent us from doing what is good, and not doing evil right here on Earth.It should be love that binds the heart of Jesus to his disciples never fear.."If you love me Keep My commandments," He whispers.
This article mentions Iraq and the AfPak theater.
Another article today is about Yemen.
Instead of protesting 3 different conflicts, I suggest again that we protest against the DAFT war, the global insanity*.
* formerly known as GWOT and WOT (but we use our term now, not the MIC's)
One target. One law. Change that one law and you change everything.
- Our Wars Are Killing Us -
Will we protest 194 separate wars?
Everything is DAFT, I tell you.
This is not news to the Anti-War activists among us. It's been a subject of signs, chants and rants at every anti-war action I've been in. It's the proof of what Ike and Martin Luther King both warned US of in different words, that this war machine would bankrupt US of much more than money.
The reason nobody from either party talks about wasteful spending in the Pentagon is both sides want it so that they can claim the "strong on terror" prize. Both the Bush conservatives and the Obama conservatives are callous about the oppression of women and children in Afghanistan because they feel that it isn't happening to them. Just yesterday in another thread, someone argued about women and children in Afghanistan being stripped of their human rights but her solution was sending in more troops and mercenaries to protect them. That is the fallacious thinking of the Obama conservatives that makes them just as prowar as the Bush conservatives. You cannot bring democracy to a nation by force. Only the citizens of that land can win the fight for democracy when they are given the voice to be the society they wish to be with no foreign intervention whatsoever.
Can you still say, "I'm proud to be an American?"
Proud? Not likely.... heck, I don't even like to admit that I am an American.
I haven't said that phrase for a looooooong time.
American citizens (subjects) have no voice in our Corporate sponsored Military Dictatorship.
I am writing this now at 9:50 AM PST - Pacific Stupid Time. It is 12:50 PM EST in Warshington, D.C. - Eastern Stupid Time. That's the real time this country runs on.
That was a great article! I have been denouncing Pentagon spending for years and every year the "Defense" budget keeps going up and up. I find it infuriating.
I've written to my Congressman and asked why we need to spend almost a trillion dollars a yr on the military and on war related things? He writes back and tells me we need to do this to "protect America". What nonsense!
Face it, the Republicans love war. We can't give enough money to the military in their minds. The Democrats are scared to death to talk about cutting the Defense budget because they wet their pants at the idea of being called "unpatriotic" or of "not supporting the troops."
So when a Defense bill comes to Congress they immediately pass it with no debate or discussion. That's insane and needs to stop! When will the stupidity end?
The military are not like you or I. This statement once applied by F Scott Fitzgerald to the rich now applies only to America's golden-boys, our defenders of freedom. Reading 'The Caine Mutiny', we learn that America's military prior to WWII was considered by the public to be a career of last resort, for people who literally had nothing else they could do or family they could be with. Today we really do get the best military money can buy but what for? All those highly charged, brilliant strategists should be heading up our green-energy corporations. Instead their 'going native' in Afghanistan, how exciting and what a waste of money.
Ubrew 12
You said a waste of money; better said 'a waste of a lot of lives and maybe a planet'
Or at least a planet where many life forms can continue.
Indeed, the Bomb of Time is clicking away.
I set the Doomsday Clock at 10 seconds to midnight.
I wonder what happens when finally someone gets pissed off enough to finally set of a nuke in an American city. I wonder who'll be blamed, and what will be the response of the U.S. military.
I saw a townhall meeting carried on a Washington State station that is carried locally here in Vancouver.
A number of people stood up to give their points of view towards Tax increases to fund a Social housing program to help the homeless. Some of those that spoke very uninformed, others very erudite. There a lot of shouting and bantering and as there two sides represented the inevitable heckling.
One person in camo stands up to speak and the first words out of his mouth were "Hello I am an Iraqi war veteran". The entire room breaks out in applause like a bunch of trained seals at a circus. They hang on his every word no one interrupting. He was owed RESPECT you see. He had little more to say other then the typical I fought in Iraq to "defend peoples freedom" and a tax to pay for houses for the homeless was something Communists would do and thats not what he sacrificed his life for.
INSTANT credibility to a ridiculous arguement.
There are people on these boards who try to tie the credibility of their arguements to "having served". While sometimes it relevant to a particular topic, more often then not it is not.
That deference to "Uniform" was also exhibited when the Crook Oliver North wore full dress Uniform to give testimony at Iran Contra. "You must noq QUESTION him..he wears the UNIFORM...how dare you suggest he can LIE?".
This is not rational thinking. It is the consequence of brainwashing and conditioning.
If a group of people surrounded a City and killed every person in it, man woman and child so that 250,000 in that City slaughtered MOST people with a Conscience would declare it as a crime , one of mass murder and absolutely unacceptable.
Yet a BOMB dropped on the city by a person wearing the Uniform of the United States of America and the same 250,000 killed, and it justified.
I simply cannot reconcile with the thought processes here.
Well, 40 years ago he might have been called a 'baby killer' by the same crowd. The point is, we can't seem to just let these veterans be people.
"This is not rational thinking. It is the consequence of brainwashing and conditioning.
.
.
.
I simply cannot reconcile with the thought processes here."
Propaganda honed to a fine edge, and wonderfully executed.
Would that uniformed vet have sung a different tune if he found out that some of the homeless the tax increase was meant to help happened to be fellow vets?
There can't possibly be any homeless vets. Bill O'Reilly said if anyone could show him a homeless vet, he'd make sure that person found a home. That was some time ago. He must have completed the task by now.
There's the right way, the wrong way, and the army way. After WWII numerous books came out by returning veterans describing how the military seemed to exist in a time warp, with its own bizzare sense of reality: The Caine Mutiny, From Here to Eternity, and of course, Catch 22. By overfunding our military in a time of, yes, peace, America risks having that time warp infect the entire nation. I worry that by the time we realize this, and wake up, nations like China will have long since passed us by. What really are we defending ourselves from? If its smoke and shadows, then the defense budget is a magnificent waste of money, money that's needed to retool our economy and restructure our energy-usage to meet modern challenges.
Haiti gets hit by an earthquake and entire military hospital ships show up to provide aid. 'It's the first time we've ever used the ship to capacity' says the captain. What does that tell you? To say the military is operating at overcapacity is a massive understatement. Its operating at TWICE needed capacity, and THATS being generous toward its 'mission'.
Chalmers Johnson tells us that there are 725 military installations around the world. Why? Who is the enemy? Do we need aircraft carriers, nukes, missiles, B-52 bombers to defeat a few thousand terrorists? How do we (our children and their children) pay off our !4 million dollar debt? Watch out social security, medicare, head start???
I wonder what would be the US response to a couple Chinese military bases in Mexico, maybe a Russian base in British Columbia, possibly a couple Pakistani bases in Venezuela...
FASCISM Always needs an "enemy".
A bullseye article by Tom Engelhardt.
So very true! Almost all of the public debt of America has been due to the military. Right wingers and mainstream toadies will claim that it's because of social spending, but that is a bunch of bull.
James Madison warned over 200 years ago that the military is the greatest danger to our freedom (followed closely by corporations.)
The first insurmountable debt America faced was incurred by the Civil War. It was never paid down. You always hear about the battles and great men in the Civil War but never how it bankrupted our country and empowered corporations.
The next financial disaster for America was WWI, and WWII completely wiped out any hope of America ever becoming solvent. Instead of extracting the great financial burdens caused by that latter war from the countries that caused it; American politicians threw the onus onto the backs of American taxpayers. By the end the WII, the highest tax bracket was 92%-and poor Americans were paying 23%.
No wonder there was a tax revolt led by none other that GE and its spokesperson Ronnie Reagan. And Reagan delivered for them,too. Only he lowered taxes and increased military spending, the very culprit that got us into the mess in the first place.
This article needs wide circulation. It is already too late, but it will help explain America's demise.
I'm trying to recall who it was that said these words , variations over the centuries really :
"NO NATION has ever SURVIVED perpetual War".
there is also an ancient saying from the world's oldest continuous civilization that has never seen a BREAK in its continuity, CHINA:
"The best way to win wars is to never start them".
The United States hyper-bloated military and armament industry are the nation's own greatest enemy.
If they are not substantially curbed, they will ruin this nation as surely as the sun will rise tomorrow.
Substantially curbing them would mean at least closing down the more than 730 military bases the US has established around the world.
It would be useful to remember that the arms race and military spending bankrupted the USSR and that, along with a grand misadventure in Afghanistan, led to its eventual collapse.
Have we learned ANYTHING ?
Big Mac,
No. History repeats itself and historians repeat each other -after a little dab of revisionism.
Our heroes. Killing for God and Wall Street.
Bob Dylan - Iraq
Masters of War
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lTsAeLBdg7c&feature=related
"War is the health of the state"
Randolph Bourne
Circles within circles around the Taliban
By M K Bhadrakumar
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/LA28Df05.html
I thought the military loved killing; how's this for an unpatriotic statement:
"In an extraordinary interview timed for the London Conference, the commander of North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) forces in Afghanistan, General Stanley McChrystal, said: "As a soldier, my personal feeling is that there's been enough fighting." "
The American army clock is a slow ticker because it presently has few threats internally or externally. Patreus is king, Obama only pres.
REPORT DECLARES BIO-TERRORISM DEFENSE EXTREMELY LOUSY
This headline makes me want to write two others-- this time my own.
1) BUSH-OBAMA ANTI-TERROR DEFENSE EXTREMELY WEAK
2) BUSH-OBAMA FONDNESS FOR WAR AND TORTURE REFLECTS SADISM IN AMERICAN SOCIETY
Let us discuss these points separately.
1) When Bush-Obama covers its face, it gets punched in the stomach. When Bush-Obama covers its stomach, it gets punched in the face. When Bush-Obama turns a shoulder, it gets punched from the side. When Bush-Obama uses head-on defense, it gets hit from behind.
CONCLUSIONS: Full-body scans are not the solution. The New Yorker cartoon of a curvy girl standing in a scan booth is revealing. Six or seven bored attendants are standing around. "It's a boy!" one of them cries. We shouldn't waste resources on false security, i.e., on measures that appear to provide security without actually providing it.
2) We shouldn't do anything that increases the number of people who hate us throughout the world. The greater the number who hate us, the better the chance that one will get through with a nuclear, bio-tech or other extremely harmful device.
We should stop waging gratuitous war. We should stop torturing people.
These considerations should become the foundation of our defensive shield. While care should be taken in our airports, extreme, nit-picking care, peripheral, should be declared the fiction that it is.
Why? Because torture creates uncontrollable enmity always (ask Argentines and Uruguayans), and gratuitous war does the same.
To repeat: When Bush-Obama covers its face, it gets punched in the stomach. When Bush-Obama covers its stomach, it gets punched in the face, etc., etc.
Hey boysgramps,
It's much harder to stay here and live, than leave. So, we choose to "fight"
As ugly as we can be and be perceived. "We shall overcome"
Make Time For The Man empirePie January 27th, 2010
We’re all just slaves for the man, the man
we’re born and bred
for the man
of the man
by the man
in this huddled hood
you got to have the goods
or you just no good for the man
Say Sam’s got some bondage for ya
Sam’s got the gain for ya
as chilling calls of Uncle all across the land
call yah....
raise ya some pain for your gain
So salute the empty suit
goose step to the garden dirge
line up the faceless gaps
lost in space and time
The flow is not a river
bobbing empire fruit
to slice up for some doomsday pie
for the question is not... why
A marched sequence don’t need a now
or an Einstein garden
bordered for an ‘I am’ mark for... here
So lighten up and do the shimmy sham
do the flimflam... dab on some man tan
move in line for the predator surge
the no mans plan
for the gain of man
the no man reign
1 billion for Afghanistan
1 Billion for Iraq
1 billion for Pakistan
1 Billion for Iran
1 billion for Palestine
1 Billion for Israel
Hell lets just say 100 billion all over the world to countryS that will hunt down and kill terrorists
Hell give then each a billion, and then 10 million for every terrorist captured and killed.
That would have saved us 1 trillion over 8 years on the wars.
And we could have cut the military budget 250 billion a year over 8 years and saved another 1.6 Trillion .
WAR IS A FOOLS GAME, FOR ANGRY HOSTILE TESTOSTERONE Filled bankers and military industrial complex traitors.
WE ARE GOING BROKE , THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE HAVE DIED ,SO THESE AHOLES CAN GET BLOW THEIR WADS USING THEIR GUNS.
I'm going to forward your seditious comments to President Emmanuel.
It's not just the war that's killing us, it the more than 700 military bases that we have installed all over the world. I've had occasion to visit several of them, expecting to find quonset huts and tents. What I saw was upscale American suburbia - lovely residential neighborhoods, schools, libraries, shopping malls, drive-in movies - all the amenities of home, lovingly paid for by you and me, the American taxpayer. As if we needed to defend The U.K. Japan, Germany, The Netherlands, Portugal...
from immanent attack. While at home we can't afford a decent educational system and a national health program such as that enjoyed by those countries.
Why is this issue not discussed?