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Afghan War Leaks Expose Costly, Deceitful March of Folly
The brutality and fecklessness of the U.S.-led war in Afghanistan have been laid bare in an indisputable way just days before the House of Representatives is scheduled to vote on whether to throw $33.5 billion more into the Afghan quagmire, when that money is badly needed at home.
On Sunday, the Web site Wikileaks posted 75,000 reports written mostly by U.S. forces in Afghanistan during a six-year period from January 2004 to December 2009. The authenticity of the material - published under the title "Afghan War Diaries" - is not in doubt.
The New York Times, which received an embargoed version of the documents from Wikileaks, devoted six pages of its Monday editions to several articles on the disclosures, which reveal how the Afghan War slid into its current morass while the Bush administration concentrated U.S. military efforts on Iraq.
Wikileaks also gave advanced copies to the British newspaper, The Guardian, and the German newsmagazine, Der Spiegel, thus guaranteeing that the U.S. Fawning Corporate Media could not ignore these classified cables the way it did five years ago with the "Downing Street Memo," a leaked British document which described how intelligence was "fixed" around President George W. Bush's determination to invade Iraq.
The Washington Post also led its Monday editions with a lengthy article about the Wikileaks' disclosure of the Afghan War reports.
Still, it remains to be seen whether the new evidence of a foundering war in Afghanistan will lead to a public groundswell of opposition to expending more billions of dollars there when the money is so critically needed to help people to keep their jobs, their homes and their personal dignity in the United States.
But there may be new hope that the House of Representatives will find the collective courage to deny further funding for feckless bloodshed in Afghanistan that seems more designed to protect political flanks in Washington than the military perimeters of U.S. bases over there.
Assange on Pentagon Papers
Wikileaks leader Julian Assange compared the release of "The Afghan War Diaries" to Daniel Ellsberg's release in 1971 of the Pentagon Papers. Those classified documents revealed the duplicitous arguments used to justify the Vietnam War and played an important role in eventually getting Congress to cut off funding.
Ellsberg's courageous act was the subject of a recent Oscar-nominated documentary, entitled "The Most Dangerous Man in America," named after one of the less profane sobriquets thrown Ellsberg's way by then-national security adviser Henry Kissinger.
I imagine Dan is happy at this point to cede that particular honorific to the Wikileaks' leaker, who is suspected of being Pfc. Bradley Manning, a young intelligence specialist in Iraq who was recently detained and charged with leaking classified material to Wikileaks.
An earlier Wikileaks' disclosure - also reportedly from Manning - revealed video of a U.S. helicopter crew cavalierly gunning down about a dozen Iraqi men, including two Reuters journalists, as they walked along a Baghdad street.
Wikileaks declined to say whether Manning was the source of the material. However, possibly to counter accusations that the leaker (allegedly Manning) acted recklessly in releasing thousands of secret military records, Wikileaks said it was still withholding 15,000 reports "as part of a harm minimization process demanded by our source."
After Ellsberg was identified as the Pentagon Papers leaker in 1971, he was indicted and faced a long prison sentence if convicted. However, a federal judge threw out the charges following disclosures of the Nixon administration's own abuses, such as a break-in at the office of Ellsberg's psychiatrist.
In public speeches over the past several years, Ellsberg has been vigorously pressing for someone to do what he did, this time on the misbegotten wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Ellsberg also has praised Assange for providing a means for the documents to reach the public.
Ellsberg and other members of The Truth Telling Coalition established on Sept. 9, 2004, have been appealing to government officials who encounter "deception and cover-up" on vital issues to opt for "unauthorized truth telling." [At the end of this story, see full text of the group's letter, which I signed.]
Emphasizing that "citizens cannot make informed choices if they do not have the facts," the Truth Telling Coalition challenged officials to give primary allegiance to the Constitution, and noted the readiness of groups like the ACLU and The Project on Government Oversight (POGO) to offer advice and support.
What's New?
In a taped interview, Assange noted in his understated way that, with the Internet, the "situation is markedly different" from Pentagon Papers days. "More material can be pushed to bigger audiences, and much sooner."
Also, the flow of information can evade the obstructions of traditional news gatekeepers who failed so miserably to inform the American people about the Bush administration's deceptions before the Iraq War.
People all over the world can get "the whole wad at once" and put the various reports into context, which "is not something that has previously occurred; that is something that can only be brought about as a result of the Internet," Assange said.
However, Assange also recognized the value of involving the traditional news media to ensure that the reports got maximum attention. So, he took a page from Ellsberg's experience by creating some competitive pressure among major news outlets, giving the 75,000 reports to the New York Times, the Guardian and Der Spiegel. Beginning Sunday afternoon, all three posted articles about the huge dump of information.
Assange noted that the classified material includes many heart-rending incidents that fit into the mosaic of a larger human catastrophe. These include one depicted in Der Spiegel's reportage of accidental killings on June 17, 2007, when U.S. Special Forces fired five rockets at a Koran school in which a prominent al-Qaeda functionary was believed to be hiding.
When the smoke cleared, the Special Forces found no terrorist, but rather six dead children in the rubble of the school and another who died shortly after.
Role of Pakistan
Perhaps the most explosive revelations disclose the double game being played by the Pakistani Directorate for Inter-Service Intelligence (ISI). Der Spiegel reported: "The documents clearly show that this Pakistani intelligence agency is the most important accomplice the Taliban has outside of Afghanistan."
The documents also show ISI envoys not only are present when insurgent commanders hold war councils, but also give specific orders to carry out assassinations - including, according to one report, an attempt on the life of Afghan President Hamid Karzai in August 2008.
Former Pakistani intelligence chief, Gen. Hamid Gul, is depicted as an important source of aid to the Taliban, and even, in another report, as a "leader" of the insurgents. The reports show Gul ordering suicide attacks, and describe him as one of the most important suppliers of weaponry to the Talban.
Though the Pakistani government has angrily denied U.S. government complaints about Gul and the ISI regarding secret ties to the Taliban and even to al-Qaeda, the new evidence must raise questions about what the Pakistanis have been doing with the billions of dollars that Washington has given them.
Two Ex-Generals Got It Right
We have another patriotic truth-teller to thank for leaking the texts of cables that Ambassador (and former Lt. Gen.) Karl Eikenberry sent to Washington on Nov. 6 and 9, 2009, several weeks before President Barack Obama made his fateful decision to send 30,000 more troops to Afghanistan.
In a somewhat condescending tone, Eikenberry described the request from Gen. Stanley McChrystal, then commander of allied forces in Afghanistan, for more troops as "logical and compelling within his narrow mandate to define the needs" of the military campaign.
But then Eikenberry warned repeatedly about "unaddressed variables" like militants' "sanctuaries" in Pakistan. For example, the ambassador wrote:
"More troops won't end the insurgency as long as Pakistan sanctuaries remain ... and Pakistan views its strategic interests as best served by a weak neighbor."
In Eikenberry's final try at informing the White House discussion (in his cable of Nov. 9), the ambassador warned pointedly of the risk that "we will become more deeply engaged here with no way to extricate ourselves."
At the time, it seemed that Eikenberry's message was getting through to the White House. On Nov. 7, Der Spiegel published an interview with National Security Adviser (former Marine General) James Jones, who was asked whether he agreed with Gen. McChrystal that a substantial troop increase was needed. Jones replied:
"Generals always ask for more troops; I believe we will not solve the problem with more troops alone. You can keep on putting troops in, and you could have 200,000 troops there and Afghanistan will swallow them up as it has done in the past."
However, McChrystal and his boss, then-Central Command chief Gen. David Petraeus pressed the case for more troops, a position that had strong support from Defense Secretary Robert Gates, former Vice President Dick Cheney, key hawks in Congress and Washington's neoconservative-dominated opinion circles.
After months of internal debate, President Obama finally caved in and gave McChrystal nearly all the troops that he had requested. (McChrystal has since been replaced by Petraeus as commander of forces in Afghanistan.)
Despite the fact that the Wikileaks disclosures offer fresh support for the doubters on the Afghan War escalation, Jones acted as the good soldier on Sunday, decrying the unauthorized release of classified information, calling Wikileaks "irresponsible."
Jones also lectured the Pakistanis:
"Pakistan's military and intelligence services must continue their strategic shift against insurgent groups. The balance must shift decisively against al-Qaeda and its extremist allies. U.S. support for Pakistan will continue to be focused on building Pakistani capacity to root out violent extremist groups."
[Note: Okay; he's a general. But the grammatical mood is just a shade short of imperative. And the tone is imperial/colonial through and through. I'll bet the Pakistanis are as much swayed by that approach as they have been by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's admonitions not to be concerned about India - just terrorists.]
And regarding "progress" in Afghanistan? Jones added that "the U.S. and its allies have scored several significant blows against the insurgency."
However, that's not the positive spin that Joint Chiefs Chairman Adm. Mike Mullen was offering just four weeks ago. On his way to Kabul, again, Mullen spoke of "recent setbacks in the Afghan campaign."
"We underestimated some of the challenges" in Marja, the rural area of Helmand province that was cleared in March by U.S. Marines, only to have Taliban fighters return. "They're coming back at night; the intimidation is still there," Mullen said.
Of the much more ambitious (and repeatedly delayed) campaign to stabilize the Taliban stronghold of Kandahar, Mullen said: "It's going to take until the end of the year to know where we are there."
Would you say yes to an additional $33.5 billion for this fool's errand?
* * * *
Text of 2004 Appeal from Truth Telling Coalition follows:
September 9, 2004
APPEAL TO: Current Government Officials
FROM: The Truth-Telling Coalition
It is time for unauthorized truth telling.
Citizens cannot make informed choices if they do not have the facts—for example, the facts that have been wrongly concealed about the ongoing war in Iraq: the real reasons behind it, the prospective costs in blood and treasure, and the setback it has dealt to efforts to stem terrorism. Administration deception and cover-up on these vital matters has so far been all too successful in misleading the public.
Many Americans are too young to remember Vietnam. Then, as now, senior government officials did not tell the American people the truth. Now, as then, insiders who know better have kept their silence, as the country was misled into the most serious foreign policy disaster since Vietnam.
Some of you have documentation of wrongly concealed facts and analyses that—if brought to light—would impact heavily on public debate regarding crucial matters of national security, both foreign and domestic. We urge you to provide that information now, both to Congress and, through the media, to the public.
Thanks to our First Amendment, there is in America no broad Officials Secrets Act, nor even a statutory basis for the classification system. Only very rarely would it be appropriate to reveal information of the three types whose disclosure has been expressly criminalized by Congress: communications intelligence, nuclear data, and the identity of US intelligence operatives. However, this administration has stretched existing criminal laws to cover other disclosures in ways never contemplated by Congress.
There is a growing network of support for whistleblowers. In particular, for anyone who wishes to know the legal implications of disclosures they may be contemplating, the ACLU stands ready to provide pro bono legal counsel, with lawyer-client privilege. The Project on Government Oversight (POGO) will offer advice on whistle blowing, dissemination and relations with the media.
Needless to say, any unauthorized disclosure that exposes your superiors to embarrassment entails personal risk. Should you be identified as the source, the price could be considerable, including loss of career and possibly even prosecution. Some of us know from experience how difficult it is to countenance such costs. But continued silence brings an even more terrible cost, as our leaders persist in a disastrous course and young Americans come home in coffins or with missing limbs.
This is precisely what happened at this comparable stage in the Vietnam War. Some of us live with profound regret that we did not at that point expose the administration’s dishonesty and perhaps prevent the needless slaughter of 50,000 more American troops and some 2 to 3 million Vietnamese over the next ten years. We know how misplaced loyalty to bosses, agencies, and careers can obscure the higher allegiance all government officials owe the Constitution, the sovereign public, and the young men and women put in harm’s way. We urge you to act on those higher loyalties.
A hundred forty thousand young Americans are risking their lives every day in Iraq for dubious purpose. Our country has urgent need of comparable moral courage from its public officials. Truth telling is a patriotic and effective way to serve the nation. The time for speaking out is now.
SIGNATORIES
Appeal from the Truth-Telling Coalition
Edward Costello, Former Special Agent (Counterintelligence), Federal Bureau of Investigation
Sibel Edmonds, Former Language Specialist, Federal Bureau of Investigation
Daniel Ellsberg, Former official, U.S. Departments of Defense and State
John D. Heinberg, Former Economist, Employment and Training Administration, U.S. Department of Labor
Larry C. Johnson, Former Deputy Director for Anti-Terrorism Assistance, Transportation Security, and Special Operations, Department of State, Office of the Coordinator for Counter Terrorism
Lt. Col Karen Kwiatowski, USAF (ret.), who served in the Pentagon's Office of Near East Planning
John Brady Kiesling, Former Political Counselor, U.S. Embassy, Athens, Department of State
David MacMichael, Former Senior Estimates Officer, National Intelligence Council, Central Intelligence Agency
Ray McGovern, Former Analyst, Central Intelligence Agency
Philip G. Vargas, Ph.D., J.D., Dir. Privacy & Confidentiality Study, Commission on Federal Paperwork (Author/Director: "The Vargas Report on Government Secrecy" -- CENSORED)
Ann Wright, Retired U.S. Army Reserve Colonel and U.S. Foreign Service Officer
- Posted in




26 Comments so far
Show AllNothing good ever comes from war crimes.
What Dr. King said long ago remains true today.
“The greatest purveyor of violence in the world today -- my own government.”
And from that speech:
http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/45a/058.html
"This is the message of the great Buddhist leaders of Vietnam. Recently one of them wrote these words:"
"Each day the war goes on the hatred increases in the heart of the Vietnamese and in the hearts of those of humanitarian instinct. The Americans are forcing even their friends into becoming their enemies. It is curious that the Americans, who calculate so carefully on the possibilities of military victory, do not realize that in the process they are incurring deep psychological and political defeat. The image of America will never again be the image of revolution, freedom and democracy, but the image of violence and militarism."
I doubt that the Pashtun people of Afghanistan and Pakistan will ever forgive what we have done. Their resistance will be carried on for generations if neces
Let's hope gonzonews' comment wasn't cut off abruptly due to the storm troopers bashing down his door and dragging him off.
Good post, excellent article as always from Roy McGovern.
Every current article on Afghanistan should contain information on the agendas of the American corporate imperial empire.
There is ample documentation going back to the 90's on the old UNOCAL trans-Afghan pipeline plans. And today there are investment groups lined up to engage in similiar trans-Afghan pipeline projects. And then there is Afghanistan's mineral wealth.
Why the journalists, even "progressives", rarely mention this is huge question ?
And what a horrible price to pay so Big Oil can run pipelines through Afghanistan to market Central Asian oil and natural gas throughout Asia !
Endless human suffering and $Trillions of taxpayer money (or shall we say debt plus interest) for Afghanistan and Iraq as our domestic economy implodes.
Just so the American people can burn all the lights in their homes and leave their gas guzzling SUV's idling in the driveway! The American people have become a bloodthirsty, grasping and ungracious people!
"Why the journalists, even "progressives", rarely mention this is huge question"
NOPE! That is the only 'other reason' ever mentioned; Greenspan even made it a point to say in his book.
What is NOT mentioned ever is ISRAEL'S hand in the matter, as they direct US Middle East policy. Netanyahu's statements say as much.
typo...similar
Or how about similar and insane trans-Afghan pipeline projects.
The Russians tried to export natural gas from Afghanistan and their pipelines and wells were frequently sabotaged forcing them to abandon the plan.
Barbara Tuchman described this long, historic pattern in her 1984 book, "The March of Folly: From Troy to Vietnam."
BrianW
Excellent analogy to a most excellent book as what the Unite States is doing in the Middle East certainly reaffirms what Ms. Tuchman wrote in her book and that is that so many countries will keep committing acts of folly in order to justify their own foolish self-interests.
"We have guided missiles and misguided men."-Martin Luther King Jr.
"The worst crimes were dared by a few, willed by more and tolerated by all"-Tacitus
Still, it remains to be seen whether the new evidence of a foundering war in Afghanistan will lead to a public groundswell of opposition to expending more billions of dollars there when the money is so critically needed to help people to keep their jobs, their homes and their personal dignity in the United States.
I'd wager that the release of these documents will not have this effect. Obama is probably running around the White House barking orders at every chief of every clandestine service to eliminate Julian Assange "with extreme prejudice". That's the only thing on his diseased mind at the moment.
Yes, obomber is one sick war criminal !
"And if they will lie for you, surely they will lie to you."
That is the crux of the matter - Americans were laughing threw their sleeves when the US was abusing civil rights of others, and then abracadabra, it came home as it inevitably would.
I was at the PDA Convention in Cleveland last weekend and saw the documentary "The Most Dangerous Man in America." and the discussion with John Nichols and Ellsberg that followed. Rich material, worth the price of admission. Just one point to emphasize. "Counterinsurgency" is a very old concept. We were doing counterinsurgency in Viet Nam and Ellsberg was at first an advocate of this rather than carpet bombing. My Lai was a consequence of a counterinsurgency strategy. So is spraying the area around where an IED explodes (Iraq) and so is spraying a crowd with bullets from a helicopter in Afghanistan if a weapon in that crowd is discoverd. In all cases of such counterinsurgency the solders doing the killing are acting under orders. In all cases the pacification done relies on the fear induced in the public. In all cases it is meant as and understood by those affected as collective retaliation and in almost all cases it produces more insurgency than it quells. McCrystal and Petraeus are masters of such counterinsurgency, Petraeus has written the book on it and knows what it really is--and he must realize how ultimately futile it will become as this war escalates. Blame the Generals, not the Captains, Sergeants or enlisted men. After all they were just following orders--what's wrong with that.
In Nam we used to follow the motto: Kill them all and let God sort them out.
How did that work out? Not well, huh?
Unfortunately, the men who fight the war take the guilt and pain of the failed policy. Then come home and are hated by the citizen and scorned by the government which sent them to do the dirt work.
How is Obama working out?
Not well, huh?
I've been rereading 1984. Since 1950, as in the book, the USA has produced enough wealth for every single person in the world to have food, shelter,and enough disposable income to live decently and be generous, I have to wonder why this hasn't happened.
Is is possible that our ruling class, as the one in Winston Smith's world, want power for it's own sake? That power is not a means but an end? That the ruling class is determined that there WILL be the desperately poor, the middle class, and the ruling class just because the idea of everyone being equal ruins the hierarchical society that helps them feel superior?
As schools are closing, no war on any front shows any end in sight. As the infrastructure crumbles no banking system shows any sign of voluntarily instituting any reforms----and they literally dare the government to impose regulations on them.
In 1984 O'Brien says that the proles will never revolt because they can't, and the members of the outer party dare not even think of revolting----that would be thought crime. There is no telescreen in my house yet that I know of but I have heard that every thing I say can be heard through my cell phone, even if it is turned off.
Who are we? What are we that we allow schools and libraries to be closed while defense spending increases exponentially? Is the sole purpose here to waste recourses so the gap between the rich and the poor can continue to widen?
I hear the AC unit running outside my window. How much longer before only the ruling class may have air conditioning?
The more miserable we become the less energy we have to protest.
Your computer is the telescreen (maybe not as powerful as the one in 1984).
How we structure society is a choice we make. The is no "natural" hierarchy. Our current system's organization is an act of will.
Whose will? My will? Your will?
Of course there is no natural hierarchy. Is an oak tree superior to an elm tree? Not superior in it's value to humans, but intrinsically superior? Ridiculous! Unless you believe in a personal God who has his 'favorite' humans and trees and horses.
I think maybe you are a member of the ruling class, and I may have just turned my life into a living hell, but then again what would big brother want with a 67 year old fart who knows what love, loyalty, and friendship among humans finally comes down to?
Kill me? Absolutely nonsensical! Why bother? Then again, O'Brien was insane.
I have also been rereading 1984, Brave New World, and Fahrenheit 451. Not imaginative science fiction.
I certainly hope that Wikileaks has the impact of Ellsberg's Pentagon Papers. I worry, though, about the difference in the populace. By the time Ellsberg let let loose his info, USians were beyond tired of the war, and had been constantly inundated by news reports of the violence, of the protests, of the Kent State shootings. The draft was on. Here, all has been much more controlled. The wars? Well, yes, there have always been wars . . .
I've been reading the mainstream media spin on the Wikileaks today, and it's the usual crap: is this breaching "national security"? Like, the Afghanis are finally going to realize that the US has been committing war crimes? It's ridiculous. I'm no hero, believe me, but I can smuggle in some intelligence from my teaching attempts. Most of our young people are so scared that they'll buy this idea that Wikileaks is a security breach. They are so afraid of the terrorists who have NOT harmed them that . . . you know what those cog scientists say about not thinking about an elephant.
Mind control has come a long way since 1971.
I have made some attempts at subversive teaching in my time. I can remember coming home proud of the light I saw turn on in a student's eyes. When I see them now, themselves getting old, sometimes they tell me how much I taught them. I smile and say 'thank you'. They are being polite; what harm could a white lie do if it helps an old man easier to his grave? They are kind.
Those who learned from me would curse me and thank me at the same time, but they would never, ever, feed me any bullshit. I hope I taught them not to insult their old teacher. If I ever did any real good I will never know it.
I'm sorry if I seem rude, but don't you know the difference between science fiction and prophecy? Would you really read Flannery O'Connor, turn up your nose at it, and say "That wasn't funny"?
So when do the hearings begin? They'll be held in the basement of the Rayburn building, right?
Mucich
Excellent point. The Democrats, after years of whining about the Republicans, now have the power to effect change but yet, outside of Kucinich, I cannot recollect any of our political leaders calling, especially after the release of these documents, for the immediate withdraw of U.S. troops and civilian contractors from those quagmires in Afghanistan and Iraq. That lack of action simply confirms, of course, what little difference there is between the GOP and the Savage Mules.
Don't believe Kucinich - all it takes is an airplane ride.
It took over 45 years for the real story about the Gulf of Tonkin incident to come out. It would be hyped at the time to escalate the Viet Nam war. Read, "Skunks, Boogies, Silent Hounds, and Flying Fish: The Gulf of Tonkin Mystery, 2-4 August 1964", which is an official NSA article by historian
Robert Honyak. Within a few years the US military was giving daily briefings that were so full of hype and optimistic forecasts that the reporters started referring to them as the "five o'clock follies".
In the Summer of 2002, General Tommy Frank informed US Senator Bob Graham that they were secretly planning to invade Iraq. If that information from 1964 and 2002 had been made available to the Public and Congress, we might not have been dragged into the quagmires in Iraq and Viet Nam. I don't have a lot of confidence in our Congress or the White House but hopefully if this information from Wikileaks makes them reconsider, it will have been worth leaking all of the material. Just this evening, I watched a jounalist back from Afghanistan on the Rachel Maddow show rip the so called Marjah offensive by saying that both the military and political offensive have been a total failure. He needs to testify in front of Congress now instead of reading about it in another leaked document five years from now.
"But there may be new hope that the House of Representatives will find the collective courage to deny further funding for feckless bloodshed in Afghanistan..."
To paraphrase The Who, "Meet the new hope. Same as the old hope."
Great Stuff Ray,
The key to being a Good American is recognition of there being a "sovereign public" as opposed to Aristocracy. Ray's piece correctly identifies what America was founded on: Self-Rule.
We must pro-actively rule this place, or ambitious men will step into the vacuum and Lord over us in our slumber. That's what's happened already, of course. And it was predicted by the founding fathers. The Anti-Federalists warned of the dangers of vesting too much power in a Congress and a chief executive, and they refused to sign the constitution without the promise of a bill of rights to protect the citizens.
They were outnumbered and outflanked by a collection of scheming bankers and "consolidators" who demanded debates on the constitution be in secret. The Anti-Federalists refused, publishing their arguments against a huge powerful federal government in newspapers across the land. This 1787 hard-sell by the Federalists of a powerful congress who couldn't be recalled for six years and not paid by their state, of a powerful executive who could commit treason via his powers of pardon, and a judiciary who couldn't really be impeached without super-human efforts contradicted everything the 1776 government had stood for.
James Madison, who devised it, opposed the bill of rights at the time. He and George Washington felt at the time that the finished document was a terrible compromise. Washington said he regretted ever even getting involved with it. The only way it was ever ratified was the wording was so vague that nobody really knew what the hell it meant. But later Madison reversed himself and became a life-long champion of the Bill of Rights.
The Bill of Rights is not a minor part of the Constitution. It is the only reason the United States was born. We all must pledge to hold the enemies of the Constitution accountable for violating what President Lincoln called "the highest authority of man" (He ran on the platform that God was not the highest authority, but that the US Constitution was. Seward, his party opposition disagreed, and lost.)
TJ
"A standing military force, with an overgrown Executive will not long be safe companions to liberty. The means of defense against foreign danger, have been always the instruments of tyranny at home. Among the Romans it was a standing maxim to excite a war, whenever a revolt was apprehended.
Throughout all Europe, the armies kept up under the pretense of defending, have enslaved the people." - James Madison, speech at the Constitutional Convention, June 29, 1787
"Of all the enemies to public liberty war is, perhaps, the most to be dreaded, because it comprises and develops the germ of every other. War is the parent of armies; from these proceed debts and taxes; and armies, and debts, and taxes are the known instruments for bringing the many under the domination of the few. In war, too, the discretionary power of the Executive is extended; its influence in dealing out offices, honors, and emoluments is multiplied; and all the means of seducing the minds, are added to those of subduing the force, of the people.
The same malignant aspect in republicanism may be traced in the inequality of fortunes, and the opportunities of fraud, growing out of a state of war, and in the degeneracy of manners and of morals, engendered by both. No nation
could preserve its freedom in the midst of continual warfare."
- JAMES MADISON
"Political Observations"
April 20, 1795
"Liberty cannot be caged into a charter or handed on ready-made to the next generation. Each generation must recreate liberty for its own times. Whether or not we establish freedom rests with ourselves." -- Florence Ellinwood Allen
If ever Benjamin Franklin's "We must all hang together or most assuredly we'll each hang seperately" rings true, it's now, what with right-wingers and the MSM blaming us progressives for everything from the financial meltdown (too many regulations) to the Afghanistan quagmire (too much political meddling in the war). Worse, due in part to the right-wing's control of the media (especially talk radio and TV) the public is paying attention to what they're saying. Meanwhile we're stuck with Democratic politicans who are either too cowardly to advocate for progressive causes, or, on the few occasions when a Democrat actually does muster up the courage & steps up to the plate, he or she garners scant media attention. Which, no surpise, is to say that the system's stacked against us at a moment when time's running out on account of perpetual war + global warming + economic meltdown = doomsday. And faced with the impending doom one would think that progressives would rise up en masse. Unfortunately this isn't happening. Why? The divide and conquer of single issue politics, whereby advocates of this or that cause mobilize only (or mostly) for their particular cause and hardly ever for someone else's cause. What's the answer? The all for one and one for all in pursuit of a better world. which, as it turns out, calls for us to struggle simultaneously for every progressive cause, rather than take on these struggles one at a time. Otherwise? Does anyone believe that right-wingers, should they prevail, will treat us progressives any better than the English would have treated Ben Franklin & friends, had the Redcoats prevailed? But then again, even if the right-wingers turn out to be merciful and spare us, someone's child or grandchild will be stuck with answering the call, "Will the last one out please turn off the lights?"