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AIPAC Works for the 1 Percent
Chris Hedges gave this talk Saturday night in Washington, D.C., at the Occupy AIPAC protest, organized by CODEPINK Women for Peace and other peace, faith and solidarity groups.
The battle for justice in the Middle East is our battle. It is part of the vast, global battle against the 1 percent. It is about living rather than dying. It is about communicating rather than killing. It is about love rather than hate. It is part of the great battle against the corporate forces of death that reign over us—the fossil fuel industry, the weapons manufacturers, the security and surveillance state, the speculators on Wall Street, the oligarchic elites who assault our poor, our working men and women, our children, one in four of whom depend on food stamps to eat, the elites who are destroying our ecosystem with its trees, its air and its water and throwing into doubt our survival as a species.
Illustration by Mr. Fish
What is being done in Gaza, the world’s largest open-air prison, is a pale reflection of what is slowly happening to the rest of us. It is a window into the rise of the global security state, our new governing system that the political philosopher Sheldon Wolin calls “inverted totalitarianism.” It is a reflection of a world where the powerful are not bound by law, either on Wall Street or in the shattered remains of the countries we invade and occupy, including Iraq with its hundreds of thousands of dead. And one of the greatest purveyors of this demented ideology of violence for the sake of violence, this flagrant disregard for the rule of domestic and international law, is the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, or AIPAC.
I spent seven years in the Middle East. I was the Middle East bureau chief for The New York Times. I lived for two of those seven years in Jerusalem. AIPAC does not speak for Jews or for Israel. It is a mouthpiece for right-wing ideologues, some of whom hold power in Israel and some of whom hold power in Washington, who believe that because they have the capacity to war wage they have a right to wage war, whose loyalty, in the end, is not to the citizens of Israel or Palestine or the United States but the corporate elites, the defense contractors, those who make war a business, those who have turned ordinary Palestinians, Israelis and Americans, along with hundreds of millions of the world’s poor, into commodities to exploit, repress and control.
We have not brought freedom, democracy and the virtues of Western civilization to the Muslim world. We have brought state terrorism, massive destruction, war and death. There is no moral distinction between a drone strike and the explosion of the improvised explosive device, between a suicide bombing and a targeted assassination. We have used the iron fist of the American military to implant our oil companies in Iraq, occupy Afghanistan and ensure that the Muslim world remains submissive and compliant. We have supported a government in Israel that has carried out egregious war crimes in Lebanon and Gaza and is daily stealing larger and larger portions of Palestinian land. We have established a network of military bases, some the size of small cities, in Iraq, Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Kuwait, and we have secured basing rights in the Gulf states of Bahrain, Qatar, Oman and the United Arab Emirates. We have expanded our military operations to Uzbekistan, Pakistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Egypt, Algeria and Yemen. And no one believes, except perhaps us, that we have any intention of leaving.
And let us not forget that deep inside our secret world of offshore penal colonies, black sites, and torture and interrogation centers, we practice the cruelty and barbarity that always accompanies unchecked imperial power. There were scores of graphic pictures and videos from the prison in Abu Ghraib that were swiftly classified and hidden from public view. And in these videos, as Seymour Hersh reported, mothers who were arrested with their young sons, often children, watched in horror as their boys were repeatedly sodomized. This was filmed. And on the soundtrack you hear the boys shrieking. And the mothers were smuggling notes out to their families saying, “Come and kill us because of what is happening.”
We are the biggest problem in the Middle East. It is we who legitimize the Mahmoud Ahmadinejads, suicide bombers and radical jihadists. The longer we drop iron fragmentation bombs and seize Muslim land, the longer we kill with impunity, the more these monsters, reflections of our own distorted image, will proliferate.
“If you gaze into the abyss,” Friedrich Nietzsche wrote, “the abyss gazes into you.”
I am no friend of the Iranian regime, which helped create and arm Hezbollah, is certainly meddling in Iraq, has persecuted human rights activists, gays, women and religious and ethnic minorities, embraces racism and intolerance, and uses its power to deny popular will. And yes, it is a regime that appears determined to build a nuclear weapon, although I would stress that no one has offered any proof this is occurring. I have spent time in Iranian jails. I was once deported from Tehran in handcuffs. But I do not remember Iran orchestrating a coup in the United States to replace an elected government with a brutal dictator who for decades persecuted, assassinated and imprisoned democracy activists. I do not remember Iran arming and funding a neighboring state to wage war against our country. Iran never shot down one of our passenger jets, as did the USS Vincennes—nicknamed Robocruiser by the crews of other American vessels—when in June 1988 it fired missiles at an Airbus filled with Iranian civilians, killing everyone on board. Iran is not sponsoring terrorist strikes within the United States, as our intelligence services and the Israeli intelligence services currently do in Iran. We have not seen five of our top nuclear scientists since 2007 murdered on American soil. The attacks in Iran include suicide bombings, kidnappings, beheadings, sabotage and “targeted assassinations” of government officials and other Iranian leaders. What would we do if the situation were reversed? How would we react if Iran carried out similar acts of terrorism against us?
We are, and have long been, the primary engine for radicalism in the Middle East. The greatest favor we can do for democracy activists in Iran, as well as in Iraq, Afghanistan, the Gulf and the states that dot North Africa, is to withdraw our troops from the region and begin to speak to Iranians and the rest of the Muslim world in the civilized language of diplomacy, respect and mutual interests. The longer we cling to the doomed doctrine of permanent war the more we give credibility to the extremists who need, indeed yearn for, an enemy that speaks in the same crude slogans of nationalist cant and violence that they do. The louder the Israelis and their idiot allies in Washington call for the bombing of Iran to thwart its nuclear ambitions, the happier are the morally bankrupt clerics who are ordering the beating and murder of demonstrators. We may laugh when crowds supporting [President] Ahmadinejad call us “the Great Satan,” but there is a very palpable reality that informs the terrible algebra of their hatred. And since even the most optimistic scenarios say that any strike on Iranian nuclear installations will at best set back Iran’s alleged weapons program by [only] three or four years, we can be sure that violence will beget violence, just as fanaticism begets fanaticism.
The hypocrisy of this vaunted moral crusade is not lost on those in the Middle East. Iran signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. Pakistan, India and Israel did not and developed nuclear weapons programs in secret. Israel now has an estimated 400 to 600 nuclear weapons. The word “Dimona,” the name of the city where the nuclear facilities are located in Israel, is shorthand in the Muslim world for the deadly Israeli threat to Muslims’ existence.
What lessons did the Iranians learn from our Israeli, Pakistani and Indian allies?
Given that we are actively engaged in an effort to destabilize the Iranian regime, given that we use apocalyptic rhetoric to describe what must be done to the Iranian regime, and given that Israel could obliterate Iran many times over, what do we expect from the Iranians? On top of this, the Iranian regime grasps that the doctrine of permanent war entails making “pre-emptive” and unprovoked strikes. And they know that if Iraq, like North Korea, had had a bomb they would have never suffered American invasion and occupation.
Those in Washington who advocate attacking Iran, knowing as little about the limitations and chaos of war as they do about the Middle East, believe they can cripple nuclear production and neutralize the 850,000-man Iranian army. They should look closely at the 2006 Israeli air campaign in southern Lebanon, which saw Hezbollah victorious and united most Lebanese behind the militant Islamic group. If the massive Israeli bombing of Lebanon failed to pacify 4 million Lebanese, how can we expect to pacify a country of 70 million people? But reality never seems to impinge on the neoconservative universe or the efficacy of its doctrine of permanent war.
I have watched over the years as these neoconservatives have meddled disastrously in the Middle East. The support by neoconservatives of the Israeli right wing—and I covered Yitzhak Rabin’s 1992 campaign for prime minister when prominent AIPAC donors poured money and resources into Likud to defeat Rabin—is not about Israel. It is about advancing this perverted ideology. Rabin detested these neoconservatives. When he made his first visit to Washington after being elected prime minister he dismissed requests from the lobby for a meeting by telling aides: “I don’t speak to scumbags.”
These neoconservatives, who like our own neoconservatives hide behind the rhetoric of patriotism, national security and religious piety, are not wedded to any discernable doctrine other than force. They, like all rabid nationalists, are stunted and deformed individuals, only able to communicate in the language of self-exaltation and violence.
“The nationalist is by definition an ignoramus,” the Yugoslav writer Danilo Kiš wrote. “Nationalism is the line of least resistance, the easy way. The nationalist is untroubled, he knows or thinks he knows what his values are, his, that’s to say national, that’s to say the values of the nation he belongs to, ethical and political; he is not interested in others, they are no concern of his, hell—it’s other people (other nations, another tribe). They don’t even need investigating. The nationalist sees other people in his own images—as nationalists.”
AIPAC does not drive Middle Eastern policy in the United States. I am afraid it is worse than that. AIPAC is one of an array of powerful and well-funded neoconservative institutions that worship force and drive our relations with the rest of the world. These neoconservatives choose an enemy and then our compliant class of journalists, specialists, military analysts, columnists and television commentators line up to serve as giddy cheerleaders for war. Moments like these always make me embarrassed to be a reporter. Our political elite, Republican and Democrat, finds in this ideology a simple, childish allure. This ideology does not require cultural, historical or linguistic literacy. It reduces the world to black and white, good and evil. The drumbeat for war with Iran sounded by AIPAC is part of this broad, sick, binary vision of a world that can be subjugated by force, a world where all will be made to kneel before these corporate and neoconservative elites, where none, including finally us, will be permitted to whisper dissent.
Pre-emptive war, under post-Nuremberg law, is defined as a criminal act of aggression. George W. Bush, whose disregard for the rule of law was legend, went to the U.N. for a resolution to attack Iraq, although his interpretation of the U.N. resolution as justifying the invasion of Iraq had dubious legal merit. But in this current debate over war with Iran, that pretense of legality is ignored. Where is Israel’s U.N. resolution authorizing it to strike Iran? Why isn’t anyone demanding that Israel seek one? Why does the only discussion in the media and among political elites center around the questions of “Will Israel attack Iran?” “Can it successfully carry out an attack?” “What will happen if there is an attack?” The essential question is left unasked. Does Israel have the right to attack Iran? And here the answer is very, very clear. It does not.
These neoconservatives were too blind and too enamored of their own power to see what invading Afghanistan and Iraq would trigger; so too are they unable to comprehend the regional conflagration that would be unleashed by attacking Iran, what it would mean for us, for Israel, for our allies and for tens, perhaps hundreds of thousands, of innocents.
“Where there is no vision, the people perish,” the Bible warns.
And since our elites have no vision it is up to us. The uprisings from Tunisia to Egypt to Greece to Occupy Wall Street to our gathering outside AIPAC’s doors in Washington are the same primal struggle for sanity, peace and justice, for a world wrenched free from the grip of those who would destroy it. And the abject fawning of our political elite, including Barack Obama, before AIPAC and its bank account is yet another window into the moral bankruptcy of our political class, another sign that the formal mechanisms of power are useless and broken. Civil disobedience is all we have left. It is our patriotic duty. We are called to make the cries of mothers, fathers and children in the squalid refugee camps in Gaza, in the suburbs of Tehran and in the bleak industrial wastelands in Ohio heard. We are called to stand up before these forces of death, the purveyors of violence, those whose hearts have grown cold with hatred. We are called to embrace and defend life with intensity and passion if we are to survive as a species, if we are to save our planet from the ravages of corporate greed and the specter of endless and futile war.
The Israeli poet Aharon Shabtai, in his poem “Rypin,” translated by Peter Cole, examined what power, force and self-worship do to compassion, justice and human decency. Rypin was the Polish town his father escaped from during the pogroms.
These creatures in helmets and khakis,
I say to myself, aren’t Jews,
In the truest sense of the word. A Jew
Doesn’t dress himself up with weapons like jewelry,
Doesn’t believe in the barrel of a gun aimed at a target,
But in the thumb of the child who was shot at—
In the house through which he comes and goes,
Not in the charge that blows it apart.
The coarse soul and iron first
He scorns by nature.
He lifts his eyes not to the officer, or the soldier
With his finger on the trigger—but to justice,
And he cries out for compassion.
Therefore, he won’t steal land from its people
And will not starve them in camps.
The voice calling for expulsion
Is heard from the hoarse throat of the oppressor—
A sure sign that the Jew has entered a foreign country
And, like Umberto Saba, gone into hiding within his own city.
Because of voices like these, father
At age sixteen, with your family, you fled Rypin;
Now here Rypin is your son.
Comments
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104 Comments so far
Show All"We are called to stand up before these forces of death, the purveyors of violence, those whose hearts have grown cold with hatred. We are called to embrace and defend life with intensity and passion if we are to survive as a species, if we are to save our planet from the ravages of corporate greed and the specter of endless and futile war."
indeed we will, stand together against the forces that bark at us to disperse as if we were dogs.
thank you for your perspective this morning. the zionist state of israel is an abomination vis a vis human rights/dignity and we live in an inverted totalitarian state. enough already... the people united will never be defeated. it's time to start visibly opposing this proposed war against iran in our public squares.
...peace...
Chris Hedges is always a ship of sanity in a sea of lunacy. If Americans (the 99%) can ever establish a real democracy here, then anything is possible.
AIPAC and the 1% consist to a great degree of the same people.
Also, the fact that Obama feels the need to pander to this pack of extra-nationals, this cabal of Likudnicks and Zionists is a confirmation of his unbounded cowardliness. It is humiliating for this citizen of the US to see his nation's president groveling before that piece of porcine "dreck", that Nitwit-Yahoo. He let this whole "Bomb-bomb-bomb Iran" thing get out of hand and is now desperately trying at a quick fix to save his ass in the election.
Oh, and you CD'ers, please don't critique the "war wage" in the article. If you go to the original, my guess is that the phrase is "wage war". CD editors do occasionally have errors in their transcriptions.
I wish "ma fello 'mericans" had the sense and awareness to read the writings of Chris Hedges rather than the pathetic and annoying horseshit that is passed off as news and "informed commentary" by the so-called journalists of the MSM . He has a unique ability to combine balance with rightful outrage in his style.
I think his name is Bibi Nuttyyahoo.
The child victims of parental abuse carry within them the tendency to repeat the pattern of physical/emotional violence against their own children. Thus the cycle repeats over and over again.
Victims of abuse also carry the impulse to struggle against the insanity of violence. To contain the inhumane, with which they are all too familiar and open the door to love.
The history of US/Israeli relations is that of encouraging and enabling repetition of the cycle of violence.
We have created a monster. It is our responsibility to tame this nation in order to create the opportunity for peace in the middle east.
"Civil disobedience is all we have left. It is our patriotic duty."
Not sure what Chris means by this, because only a few weeks ago he wrote "The Cancer in Occupy," decrying the Black Bloc actions.
The 1% have prepared well for any civil disobedience. Today CD has an article on how to fund the police state. We have spent way more money funding local police departments than the Department of Education spends on schools. No wonder we have no child left a dime.
By "civil disobedience" he means letting the police kick your ass after you tell them where and when you aren't planning to defend yourself.
One has to ask Hedges if he thinks Hezbollah (funded by Iran) was wrong to use force to at long last kick Israel out of Lebanon. Would civil disobedience have worked..?
This is Hedges' favorite refrain -- that all we can do at this point is commit mass nonviolent civil disobedience, i.e., go to jail voluntarily to make some abstract political point, and hope that this has some kind of magical effect on the system.
The wonderful thing about being a strict proponent of "nonviolent civil disobedience" is that you never have to actually explain how your prescription for "action" will actually work in the real world, since everyone is assumed to share your same assumptions. If you are asked for explanation, simply repeat the words "Martin Luther Gandhi" over and over until they have the desired effect of quashing the debate.
What I found interesting about this Hedges piece on AIPAC is that his language is so much more restrained than in his recent denunciation of anarchists. Nothing here about Zionists being a "cancer" on the US political system, simply an observation that they "serve the 1%"? Wow, Chris, you really nailed them!
"The wonderful thing about being a strict proponent of nonviolent civil disobedience is that you never have to actually explain how your prescription for "action" will actually work in the real world..."
You can't explain history to those who are ideologically blind to it; and to those who understand history, it requires no explanation.
Why Civil Resistance Works: The Strategic Logic of Nonviolent Conflict
by Maria J. Stephan and Erica Chenoweth,
International Security, Vol. 33, No. 1 (Summer 2008)
"From 2000 to 2006, organized civilian populations successfully employed nonviolent methods including boycotts, strikes, protests, and organized non-cooperation to challenge entrenched power and exact political concessions in Serbia (2000), Madagascar (2002), Georgia (2003) and Ukraine (2004-05), Lebanon (2005), and Nepal (2006)."
"Our findings show that [among 323 resistance campaigns from 1900 to 2006] major nonviolent campaigns have achieved success 53 percent of the time, compared with 26 percent for violent resistance campaigns."
If indeed you black blockers and "anarchists" wish to protest your grievances with the ever-growing military state, then get to it and save the rest of us from your testosterone-pumped rants - just stop hiding behind the skirts of the occupy movement which has been crystal clear in it's commitment to nonviolent protest. The question that arises is "who are you really fighting?"
All I want is to question the ideology of nonviolence, which is the first step for protesters to start defending themselves against police repression. As long as nonviolence remains an untouchable, unquestionable dogma, protesters will never stand up for each other or for themselves. It's a serious handicap, and the only ones who have ever shown any willingness to overcome it are denounced by Hedges as a "cancer", while the Zionists get a much softer treatment here. If anyone is a cancer, it is AIPAC, but for some reason that sort of over-the-top, vitriolic language is only reserved for the black bloc.
@ Robert Riversong
There is no "major non-violent campaign" here in the states. So, the percentage of success is zilch. Our situation will have to become much worse before we act.
And you can lead a horse to water.........
Cheeseburger!!!, cheeseburger!!!, cheeseburger!!!
If you don't understand the difference between civil disobedience and hooliganism, than you're certainly not going to understand Hedges.
Why don't you explain the difference for us all. I'm all ears.
Riversong is an arrogant prick who rarely responds directly to detractors, except to spout the worn out dogma of pacifism.
Americans must break the stranglehold of the racist zionists that dominate both their political parties by starting a new progressive party that among other important things explicitly condemns Israel's war crimes. There will be no change in the United States unless and until progressives quit the democratic party.
I can foresee a day when we condemn Israeli crimes, as we have condemned the crimes of others for whom we are responsible e.g. Sadaam Hussein. Such condemnation is meaningless, however, if we do not acknowledge and condemn our complicity in the crimes committed by our clients - as well as the crimes we commit directly. That's something I do not foresee.
To paraphrase from newbie, can one ever foresee a day when the corporate media will report on and analyze such a speech that Chris Hedges or any other critic of Israel has given and may give, either now or in the future? Or will any criticism of Israel basically remain off limits for the Fourth Estate?
Amen to that. This has been obvious for decades and yet most of the blogosphere libs & progs won't touch it.
But when will that ever happen? I fear the people who vote for the Democrats will not admit that they have been used and abused. They can not, or will not, face the fact that the Democrats are no better than the Republicans---or a better way to say that is that they are equally as evil. There is no lesser evil between these two corporate political parties.
What is a 'progressive' anyway? What is going on in this nation sure ain't progress. We are quickly returning to feudalism. It sure is not a measure of going forward to repeal the Magna Carta, Habeus Corpus, the Sixth Amendment to the Constitution and Posse Comitatus. The corrupt creatures who claim to be 'honored members of Congress' voted to pass NDAA 2012 . This terrible piece of legislation trashed these long held civil rights of American citizens. Before last Saturday we had the right to a trial before a jury with legal council if accused of a crime. Not any more. If accused of being a terrorist (without a definition of just what is a terrorist and the use of this term expands by the day), you are GUILTY! No trial is needed. Since last Saturday you may be arrested by the American military forces on American soil and held indefinitely. You may be sent to another nation to endure enhanced interrogation. The President may have anyone he wants put to death on just his word.
That is where we are now, American citizens. We are losing our rights, our jobs, our homes, our pensions, our health care, and there is worse to come. We must rise up and fight back. Some say we can do it peacefully and without violence, but some say we need to resort to armed struggle. The future is not looking good for the working people of this nation. Time to join occupy.
One cannot defeat Israel until the Empire is defeated. Israel serves as a neo-Crusader state. It is an Imperial Garrison State to keep the 'Arabs' in line. Israel is a giant gun pointed at the heads of 'the Arabs' and if that gun is not big enough, the larger gun of the entire Empire will back it up.
This is, as always, about stealing land, resources, and making 100s of billions in profit by stealing it from the taxpayer and giving it to the .01%. (for the military security complex).
It is part of the neo-fascist inverted totalitarian character of the Empire.
AIPAC and the Lobby are just a glaring (but by no means unique) example of the high-level corruption in the US political system: You get the policies you pay for. More money more influence.
The only good news is that the Empire is in its last phases. The bad news is that most of us will suffer in the process.
Good insight, Socialist.
Yes, Empire is the proximate cancerous CAUSE of all the varied 'symptom problems'.
It is Empire (and 'empire-thinking') that must be excised.
Best luck and love to the "Occupy Empire" educational and revolutionary movement.
Liberty, democracy, justice, and equality
Over
Violent/Vichy
Empire,
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
But what causes Empire-thinking? IMHO Empire thinking is Us versus Them thinking. And Us versus Them thinking is religious thinking, and THAT'S the bottom line. It may get covered up in financial-techno speak, and politco speak, but the root of it is religion. Imagine if the West was a culture of We, where every person alive was considered a brother or sister? What would Empire mean, taking your sisters stuff? Things would be entirely different at the core.
Empire-thinking is an "insider" clique who see themselves apart & above the common folks (an oligarchy). THEY generate myriads of "us vs. them" ideas (and the FALSE conclusion that differentness requires hostile response) to keep people from seeing the manipulators, the oligarchs themselves, funding all "sides", pulling the strings from undisclosed places. This is how they rule the world; in chaos & confusion. "Better to rule in hell, than serve in heaven" is their motto. They are evil incarnate.
Like I said...religion (Judeo-Christian).
Inb, Empire-thinking is also the opposite of 'democracy-thinking' ---- the later being the normal empathetic and humane type of thinking that acknowledges and even is willing to work toward a self-governing system based on justice, equality, liberty, etc.
Empire-thinking on the other hand is akin to sociopathy and not surprisingly is in the range of 1 or 2% of the general population.
One common characteristic of empire-thinking is naturally an impulse to acquire more or 'growth' in terms of money and power --- which is typically rewarded in many aspects of modern/corporate life. The typical sociopathic lack of 'empathy', in a highly driven money/power corporate culture, equates very strongly with an intentional failure to recognize, or to 'block-out', any 'negative externality costs' --- or the harmful by-products of profit oriented processes.
A cigarette corporation CEO may well seek 'growth' and profit but rationalize that the by-products of his production of cigarettes do not include the 'negative externality costs' of cancer deaths among customers, and further rationalize that his products are legal --- thus washing his hands of any responsibility for these obvious externalities and avoid any sense of empathy.
Likewise, investment bankers who knowingly create CDO, CDS, and other derivatives (that Warren Buffett termed "financial WMDs") may, like sociopaths, simply ignore the type of clearly related 'negative externality costs' that the production of their 'debt bombs' cause to individuals, governments, or the society at large.
In a society where 'growth' is the false mantra of all politicians, corporate execs, and is endlessly repeated by the cheerleaders of the corporatist mainstream media, it is not remarkable that many of the so-called leaders have internalized and rationalized an unthinking and unexamined attitude of 'growth at any cost' that is akin to the non-human actions of growing cancer cells.
Of course, cancer cells are not sentient beings and presumably have no sense of the harm that their 'growth' program is causing. Cancer cells are not guilty of willfully failing to understand (or even cover-up) the 'negative externality costs' that their growth is causing.
Whereas, 'empire-thinkers' --- at least those with even an undergraduate understanding of economics --- have to consciously ignore the reality of their 'negative externality costs'.
Best,
Alan
Yes, Empire-thinking is black and white, good vs. evil, us vs. them thinking. But you confuse religious institutions - another form of empire - with religion. There is one commonality to every religion on earth, and that is some form of the Golden Rule.
The problem is not religion, but the human institutions built by those who seek power and control, whether religious or secular.
Well said. And this particular insider clique has the uncanny ability to CORRUPT any sort of idea or institution, religious, secular, social, financial, etc..., from within. An apt scene would be where satan quotes scripture to jesus, hoping to tempt him "to the dark side" so-to-say. It's a good "word picture" of corruption in action. I generally think people are wrong to think "...just the right constitution, or societal organization, or regulation, and we'll be safe from 'them'...". It's in the "hearts & minds" where the battle occurs; an invisible "battlefield" of thoughts & ideas, leading to words & actions (beyond simple animal ones like"feed the hunger...scratch the itch, etc...) that are corrupt or noble, morally sound or unsound.
"But I do not remember Iran orchestrating a coup in the United States to replace an elected government with a brutal dictator who for decades persecuted, assassinated and imprisoned democracy activists." Say, I think Chris has put his finger on how we came to the current status of our government.
Chris is almost exactly right about AIPAC working for the 1% --- but actually AIPAC works for the EMPIRE.
It is only part of the fast evolving global corporate/financial/militarist Empire that has captured and now 'occupies' our former country by hiding behind the facade of the Empire's modernized two-party 'Vichy' sham of faux-democratic and totally illegitimate government --- just as surely as the Nazi Empire's crude single party 'Vichy' regime in France c.1940 was an unsuccessful attempt to disguise the goal of Global Empire (Third 'Reich' --- German for Empire).
I have long believed and written about these elements of this disguised and much more successful Global Empire plan, of which the US is the nominal (temporary) HQ, but including the former nation-states of the UK, Israel, Germany, etc.
AIPAC is a powerful lobby, but very fact that it has to 'lobby' at all, shows that the full global Empire is what the lobby lobbies:
http://www.rense.com/general88/aip.htm
Best luck and love to the "Occupy Empire" educational and revolutionary movement.
Liberty, democracy, justice, and equality
Over
Violent/Vichy
Empire,
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
Well, Chris Hedges went out of his way, twice repeating, that AIPAC is NOT the sole engine driving U.S. foreign policy, yet a few posters have skirted that commentary to make it once again, only about Israel.
These two quotes stand out and bear repeating:
"AIPAC does not speak for Jews or for Israel. It is a mouthpiece for right-wing ideologues, some of whom hold power in Israel and some of whom hold power in Washington, who believe that because they have the capacity to war wage they have a right to wage war, whose loyalty, in the end, is not to the citizens of Israel or Palestine or the United States but the corporate elites, the defense contractors, those who make war a business, those who have turned ordinary Palestinians, Israelis and Americans, along with hundreds of millions of the world’s poor, into commodities to exploit, repress and control.
"AIPAC does not drive Middle Eastern policy in the United States. I am afraid it is worse than that. AIPAC is one of an array of powerful and well-funded neoconservative institutions that worship force and drive our relations with the rest of the world. These neoconservatives choose an enemy and then our compliant class of journalists, specialists, military analysts, columnists and television commentators line up to serve as giddy cheerleaders for war. Moments like these always make me embarrassed to be a reporter. Our political elite, Republican and Democrat, finds in this ideology a simple, childish allure. This ideology does not require cultural, historical or linguistic literacy. It reduces the world to black and white, good and evil. The drumbeat for war with Iran sounded by AIPAC is part of this broad, sick, binary vision of a world that can be subjugated by force, a world where all will be made to kneel before these corporate and neoconservative elites, where none, including finally us, will be permitted to whisper dissent."
The only problem I have with this otherwise powerful, well-written essay is that Mr. Hedges understands that a very small body of brutally short-sighted interests make these policies and also implement them, so I object to the use of the word WE in framing support for the actual agendas. If the elites represented the will of The People, these wars would not be fought. If the elites had not managed to purchase the politicians who deregulated the media to make concentrated ownership of the public's airwaves possible, then lies, PR & covert propaganda would not be able to pass for news and thereby bamboozle so many with false narratives.
Yes, Siouxrose, as you say "bamboozle" is the operative word --- or as Obama said during his '08 campaign, "don't let them run that Ol' "Okey Doke" on you ---- and then like Nixon saying "we could do it, but it would be wrong", Obama himself went on to do just that, as the greatest Okey Doke man in history.
When it comes to disguising this global corporate/financial/militarist Empire as our former country, and posing as patriotically supporting democracy in the world, "Nobody Does It Better" than this shill for Empire, Obama.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OMOd1JJvwlM
Best luck and love to the "Occupy Empire" educational and revolutionary movement.
Liberty, democracy, justice, and equality
Over
Violent/Vichy
Empire,
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
LOOKING FORWARD, NOT BACKWARD...
From what I can tell, it ain't gonna be pretty.
Collapsenet.com and Carolynbaker.net (Speaking Truth to Power) are progressive sites that both offer grim perspectives on the sh*t-storm that is headed our way. Essentially, due to a convergence of interdependent and interlocking problems, we're rapidly moving into a time of societal collapse.
IMHO we need to look at the forest as well as the individual trees.
These sites contain careful and compassionate analyses of what can reasonably be predicted for the long- and short-term. They are from being the classic far-right "bunker building and canned goods/water/food amassing Armageddon scenarios" (not that those are necessarily bad ideas!).
How realistic are these assessments and preparation suggestions?
You be the judge...
Amma21, sounds like you would appreciate Richard Heinberg's fabulous new book, "The End of Growth".
Saturday's CD also had an article by Heinberg ---
"$5 Gas, Iranian Poker, and the Peak of 'Peak Oil' Denial"
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2012/03/03-8
Best luck and love to the "Occupy Empire" educational and revolutionary movement.
Liberty, democracy, justice, and equality
Over
Violent/Vichy
Empire,
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
Hedges:
“If you gaze into the abyss,” Friedrich Nietzsche wrote, “the abyss gazes into you.”
Time to Wake Up.
The other problem withthis essay is that Hedges condemns Hezbollah and equates suicide bombers with drone pilots, once again demonstrating the utter arrogance and ineffectivness of his bourgeoisie pacifiam and moralism.
Why Hasn't Anyone sued AIPAC as an agent for a foreign Gov't? That's a non-violent way to try & check [or at-least challenge] AIPAC's power. We have to find ways of meaningful & effective non-violent action [or in-action as the case maybe]- without making too people 'sacrificial lambs' to the naked aggressive tactics of the power elites. But you can believe that if resistance against the status quo degenerates into RIOTING- this will give them the kind of legitimized excuse to unleash the kind vicious attacks that they want to unleash ANYWAY! YET- We definitely need more effective action than just 'sitting in' singing protest songs!
Hedges asks a pertinent question that never gets asked, why do so many people in the so-called 'main-stream' act as if the US, NATO &/or Israel, etc- simply have the unquestionable right to launch an unprovoked attack on anyone they've 'demonized'- whether Iran or any other nation [some call it Euro-American 'Exceptionalism' others call it the 'white supremacist' mind-set]?
"Why Hasn't Anyone sued AIPAC as an agent for a foreign Gov't? That's a non-violent way to try & check [or at-least challenge] AIPAC's power,."
Yeah Ken Feinberg can preside over a commission on it.
JFK attempted to force the Isreali Lobby to register as a foreign agent but was stalled from within the government, and after his murder, the issue was dropped by LBJ.
Today, the Congress is like the old Supreme Soviet on zionist issues - no dissent is welcome. Support for zionsim has become part of the larger "bi-partisan national security consensus" that dominates DC.
Maybe I watch too many movies. It's the 40th anniversay of The Godfather afterall. But does anyone think like I do, that there are "ends justfiy means" organizations out there that think nothing of giving the POTUS (any POTUS) an offer he can't refuse? I think Obama has failed miserably, or succeeded as the case may be, but I also think there's a possibility that he, like other modern POTUS, is being constrained by such "offers".
Yes, I do. I think the mafia crime "families" is the most appropriate model for this global empire. And that there are criminal, amoral, "empire families" in existence, with long genealogical histories of involvement in this "empire project" ( the mafia calls its' thing "la cosa nostra" or "our thing" because the empire families wouldn't let them in on THEIR thing...empire). Their M.O. is to seduce, entice, bribe, blackmail, or assassinate any chief official who might be useful, or a hindrance, to the empire project, including POTUS.
ZO. Zionist Obama.
"If the massive Israeli bombing of Lebanon failed to pacify 4 million Lebanese, how can we expect to pacify a country of 70 million people? But reality never seems to impinge on the neoconservative universe or the efficacy of its doctrine of permanent war."
-- I agree with Siouxrose above about the use of "we". This question should read as follows: how can those who run and control the empire expect to pacify of country of 70 million people? The answer is they can't and they won't.
The constant drumbeat for war with Iran reminds me of the stories that Robert Fisk wrote about in his incredibly detailed book, "The Great War for Civilisation." In this book he goes into great detail about his experience reporting from both sides of the front lines in the Iran/Iraq War. One of his stories is about being in an Iranian dugout on the front line with Iraqi bombs going off all around him.
Excerpt: "For the youngest soldier - who welcomed us like an excited schoolboy at the entrance - was only fourteen, his voice unbroken by either fear or manhood. The oldest among them was twenty-one, an Islamic volunteer from Iran's "Reconstruction Crusade," who expounded on the principles of martyrdom to us as the guns boomed distantly away. Martyrdom, I was made to understand, was a much-discussed subject in this dugout because it was much witnessed."
"Yes, said the fourteen-year-old, two of his friends from Kerman had died in the battle for Dezful - one his own age and one only a year older. He had cried, he said, when the authorities delayed his journey to the battle front. Cried? I asked. A child cries because he cannot die yet? Were we now to have baby-wars, not wars which killed babies - we had specialised in them throughout the twentieth century - but wars in which babies, boys with unbroken voices, went out to kill? The fourteen-year-old's comments were incredible and genuine and terrifying at one and the same time, clearly unstaged, since we had only by chance chosen his dugout when we took cover from the shellfire outside."
The story continues with the young boy telling them about the willingness of Iranian's to defend their country and the faith they have in their God. The young boy says, "It is impossible for you in the West to understand. Martyrdom brings us closer to God. We do not seek death - but we regard death as a journey from one form of life to another, and to be martyred while opposing God's enemies brings us closer to God. There are two phases to martyrdom: we approach God and we also remove the obstacles that exist between God and the people. Those who create obstacles for God in this world are the enemies of God."
-----------------------
This mentality and zealous devotion to their God and way of life is what the empire is up against if they decide to invade this country. The empire may be militarily superior, but no matter what it does the majority of the Iranian people will see the invaders as "obstacles for God in this world," and all talk of pacifying, or being seen as liberators from a cruel regime, will just be a bunch of meaningless words coming from group of sociopaths who run and control the empire.
The same heart rending scenario plays out with children committing suicide, intuiting that we are at the point where there has to be something better and that it requires much more than anyone of us alone. Empire has wound the western mind around the monopole of the Bernaysian construct of advertising as the binary siphon. It is in a demented way similar to 'faith', but really just plain brainwashing the ego that has been redirected to the gonads. people are beginning precipitate like a gentle rain, which the overheated earth is desperately in need of. I'm beginning to agree with whoever proposed that we need a full fledged general strike. Start with one day, measure the response; if it fails to be adequate, a second strike; and resolve to identify and lay to rest the entity in conversation/mind-meld with the chasm.
A sane and humane society makes it less desirable for any woman to WANT to abort a child. Equally, such a society makes it less desirable for any young male (of any background) to identify with a cause that would require violence, and call for his own likely premature death.
I've always seen merit in Alan MacDonald's articulation of how the Empire works; and I've used the analogy that today's global corporations function as yesterday's pharaohs. In either case, the vast majority of the world's citizens are rendered slaves. Because interests that include, but are hardly limited to Israel's amoral hard-liners, are behind the wrecking crew's latest target, one wonders why some on C.D. ONLY focus on the Israeli factor. One answer is anti-semitism, another is a lack of reading comprehension, another is their granting COVER to the forces of Empire (as many uniformed soldiers might be inclined to do). What other option is left?
Eric: Some may think I harp on this "we" thing; however, if WE represents the 99% who are largely disenfranchised from decisions made at upper echelons, why should those disastrous decisions be cloaked by our alleged consent? The WE pronoun may function as something of a habit to writers. In my view, we must detach from its use, i.e. that umbrella so as to signify our dissent against policies of mass annihilation. I was VERY glad to see that majorities both here and in Israel do NOT support a war against Iran. Certainly HOW the poll question is framed, along with how much war porn-style PR is coming HOT off the presses, factors into the numerical results. Truth has a way of casting out the demons of war... imagine if our media was NOT occupied by the 1%.
An inspiring article with one minor flaw: "I am no friend of ....the Iranian regime...is certainly meddling in Iraq..."
The notion that a neighbor is "meddling" makes Iran's regime (and its population) sound immature, as if only the USA and Israel are "mature" enough to control other countries. This sentence has a colonial subtext. The USA and Israel "act," while others "meddle."
But the use of the words "meddling in Iraq" also bring to mind Scooby-Doo and those crazy kids, solving a crime by ripping off the rubber mask of Uncle Sam and finding... a lemonade stand. Maybe this second connotation is where he was going with this...
"it is a regime that appears determined to build a nuclear weapon, although I would stress that no one has offered any proof this is occurring."
This is claimed, over and over again, and maybe it's true, but where are the facts to support it? If he's going to make the claim, Hedges needs to offer some actual examples of evidence.
My thoughts exactly. The recent IAEA report that the US is using to justify these new sanctions was looking back to issues that have been unresolved since 2003. There is absolutely nothing new---no new evidence of a weapons program that everyone agrees was stopped in 2003.
Hedges' operative word is "appears". And he offers, not evidence (since he acknowledges there is none), but a logical argument which has some merit.
As one leg of the "Axis of Evil", Iran knows full well that the only reason we are giving aid rather than invading North Korea is because they have the bomb. Iran's leadership would be foolish NOT to create the potential to build the only defense shield that seems to work against The Great Satan. If Iran were to build a bomb, it would almost certainly be entirely defensive, since they have shown more restraint than almost any other nation in the region and have shown no evidence of being either irrational or suicidal.
Agreed.
Also Hedges says this:
"There is no moral distinction between a drone strike and the explosion of the improvised explosive device, between a suicide bombing and a targeted assassination."
There is a big moral distinction between giving one's life in defense of one's community, and jerking off a joystick in Nevada that pilots a killer drone halfway around the world. The suicide bomber is clearly morally superior to the imperial invader occupier. The suicide bomber is not perfect, but at least he or she is willing to die along with the victims. This is morally superior to the disembodied alienated drone pilot/killer.
Also this statement of Hedges is objectionable:
"I am no friend of the Iranian regime, which helped create and arm Hezbollah"
If I'm not mistaken, it was Hezbollah that repelled the Israeli attack on Lebanon. Hedges, unelaborated condemnation of Hezbollah blends seamlessly with the zionist imperialist POV.
Hedges criticisms of Israel are spot on. But his attacks on effective muslim resistance are betrayals of the struggle for justice in the middle east that Hedges claims to advocate.