Have We Been Fooled Again?
by
Tom Chartier
by Tom Chartier
DIGG THIS
These are the
days of large, desperate measures. This is the era of dictators,
threats and wars. Unmodified by reasoned debate, lacking the
rule of law, this is the age of the mob and demagogue.
Once respected
for its freedom, justice and economic opportunity, the United States
of America today is reviled for being a police state at home and
a perpetrator of illegal wars of abroad.
America’s bright
beacon of liberty has been extinguished by the arrogance of neoconservativism.
Loathed by a world grown fearful of its motives and actions, America
is a shadow of its former self.
How did this
happen? Where did we go wrong?
In a Soma-like
six years, Americans have allowed men of dubious
integrity to transform the U.S. into the very sort of bellicose
monarchy above which this country originally was established to
rise.
Article after
Amendment, the United States Constitution has been rendered irrelevant
by George W. Bush who twice swore on the Bible to uphold that document’s
honor.
The majestic
words, "Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness" have
been corrupted by America’s military-industrial-complex, the insatiable
hunger of which can only be fed by war unending. That complex paid
hand over fist to "elect" a Commander in Chief who would
lie about national security to feed its appetite for federal subsidy
of weapons, wars, troops and mercenaries with which to fight them.
The Bill of
Rights has been condemned to the ranks of "enemy combatant"
all for a manufactured
crisis which has resulted the disaster
of a shattered Afghanistan, Iraq and Lebanon, a million angry Muslims
and a snarling Shiite Crescent in the Middle East ready to take
over. The more threats of terror, real or imagined, the better for
Bush and Cheney as these threats serve the twisted purposes of Washington
DC’s delusional elite who are far removed from the America that
it was elected to serve.
The real-evil
doers are still in power. "With all the lawsuits over kidnapping
and torture marching toward the Bush administration, you might think
the top officials running the global war on terror would be worried
... Alas, no." Writes Jeff
Stein in this week’s Congressional Quarterly, "Ah, sweet
mystery of Hill life."
Earlier this
month, in a last desperate gasp, Americans refused to be enslaved.
On November 7, 2006, Americans made a clear statement that the path
of George W. Bush and Richard Cheney is not the one down which they
wish to travel.
And yet within
the halls of Congress and the polished rooms of Washington power,
frantic maneuverings for position in the new American order take
place hourly. All this is done by people who could care less about
the lives of those who depend on the deals that are done.
"Meet
the new boss. Same as the old boss!" Have we been fooled
again? Is the newly elected Congress capable of restoring the Constitution
and the Bill of Rights? Can the illegal war be brought to an end?
Is the American voter capable of demanding the Congress to do what
they were elected to do?
Or are we facing
overwhelming odds in a system so stacked against us that we do not
even have the right to ask for a new deck of cards until another
two years pass and we are dealt yet another hand full of jokers?
Did the November
7th act of national revulsion come too late?
Rome fell;
the sun did at last set on the British Empire; and the power of
the Soviet Union crumbled under the weight of bankruptcy. Will the
United States of America fade into pathetic mediocrity?
Rather than
working for peace, the United States, Britain and Israel continue
to force their fundamentalist views on the rest of the world. But
the world no longer takes seriously Bush’s bullying of a country
in which the might of the American army cannot contain insurgents
in Baghdad. The world cannot admire Cheney’s rogue state the illegal
wars and domestic
consumption of which are financed
by foreign loans.
America’s
role as a super power has vanished. America’s pretensions to the
high moral ground are greeted by disdain.
President
George W. Bush cannot
even visit the country he "liberated"
and on which he has thrown away thousands
of lives and billions
of dollars. The war in Iraq is
a failure.
Like Hitler in his April 1945 Berlin bunker, Bush continues
to deny that all is lost. And the
names of Bush and his poodle, Blair
are now synonymous with falsehood.
How can the
United States make good the evil it has done? By having a "National
Sorry Day"?
It is easy
to point the finger at post-9/11 fears, or at hostile nations. It
is a cop-out to blame political partisanship or to lambast incompetent,
corrupt, elected officials and their corporate sponsors. It is sheer
laziness to sneer at media manipulators and the federally-symbiotic
"think
tanks" which "spin" blindly delusional
agendas.
It is vital
that the true fault is faced.
Americans must
swallow their pride and take a long, hard look in the mirror. We
must ask ourselves, how did we allow this to happen? What
did we do wrong? How can we stop George W. Bush?
Elizabeth
Gyllensvard edited and contributed to this story.
November
28, 2006
Tom
Chartier [send him mail]
played lead guitar in legendary Los Angeles punk band The Rotters
for 26 years until their final appearance in January of 2004. He
has lived in Tokyo and Los Angeles. Currently he resides somewhere
in the Caribbean.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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