Left Standing Backwards
by
Robert Klassen
by Robert Klassen
That was the
name of a character in a fictional farce that I wrote many years
ago. He was afflicted with dullness and unable to respond to new
situations with new ideas. He depended on tradition to guide him,
so he was Left Standing Backwards. He reminds one of the crooks
in DC.
For example,
somebody who is in control of a region’s resources, population,
and military wants to keep it; somebody who is not in control of
the same region wants to steal it. A kind of war ensues wherein
both sides destroy as much of what each one wants as it can, namely
the resources, population, and military.
This doesn’t
make a great deal of sense unless one thinks in terms of violent
urban gangland rivalries that lead eventually to one gang’s supremacy
at city hall. On the world stage, a Stalin could reign supreme for
years even though he was a known criminal who murdered millions
of people.
There is a
kind of ideology here that we common folks tend to overlook. It
is the ideology of The
New World Century. To the intellectual heirs of Lenin and Trotsky,
resolutely standing backwards, the whole planet is a plum ripe to
be picked, and they’re the ones destined to do it. All they needed
was a pliable executive, an emergency, and the Pentagon. What they
did not see in this frenzied vision of power was the Pentagon facing
the same way, backwards.
I am no connoisseur
of warfare, but since William
S. Lind started publishing on the Internet I have followed his
thinking on the subject with great interest. As he frequently reminds
us, there were no Panzer Divisions, no fortified lines of troops,
no navy, and no air force opposing US attacks in the Middle East.
There was no siege of Stalingrad with a fixed artillery battle,
no Omaha Beach, no Iwo Jima. From a military point of view, firmly
standing backwards, our invasions of Bosnia, Afghanistan, and Iraq
really were a "cake walk." How could they be so wrong?
For an answer
to that, perhaps we should look way back at our Indian wars, and
then look carefully at what’s happening in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Indians avoided open confrontation with "disciplined"
troops, let them pass, then picked them off one by one from hiding.
This idea is more or less codified by military experts like Lind
as fourth-generation warfare, which as I understand it is when the
natives don’t want you in their territory, they will pick you off
from hiding. The Afghan people employed this technique to drive
out the British (1839–1919), the Russians (1979–1989), and now the
American NATO (2001–present), and it is being employed by the Iraqis.
The Pentagon
seems to desperately wish for an organized enemy to hammer as in
the good old days, but there is none, not even a Ho Chi Minh with
a "regular army" in the jungle. Propaganda staffers crank
out one bogeyman after another, then "kill" him off to
demonstrate "victory," but the "resistance"
continues.
There are two
ways to respond to that. One is to kill all the natives; the other
is to quit, go home, and buy what you want (oil?). While the second
alternative makes sense, those standing backwards can’t see it.
Instead they must destroy the infrastructure, pulverize entire cities,
and poison the environment with radioactive dust. If they could
they would build a wall around the people and annihilate them wholesale.
In Iraq the
neocon cabal wants permanent military bases with a fortified central
command center, and the state-corporate cabal wants the oil, but
to get either or both they need people to live and work there. Radiation
makes no distinctions, however, and no amount of political spin
will make it go away. How will those enthralled with what they imagine
the future will bring in the middle-east cope with the reality of
their own chronic death?
Here in America
another backward state movement is underway. While the media hypes
elections, only a small percentage actually votes. Bush was "elected"
by 15% of the population or less depending on how one measures the
fraud. In any case, Bush did not and does not have any "mandate"
from the people, no matter how you slice it. This reality is not
lost on the neocon cabal (although all reality seems lost on Bush).
As the neocons
look backwards fondly at Lenin, Trotsky, Stalin, Mao, and Hitler,
they see the "solution" to the problem of an indifferent
or hostile population at home in the tried and true methods of their
intellectual ancestors. First, break the middle-class. Second, imprison
and murder the ideological trouble-makers. Third, militarize the
rest.
The
Federal Reserve has done a fine job of beginning step one. The expansion
of concentration camps is under construction for step two. And the
legislation to draft every male and female between 18 and 42 is
in committee to complete step three. Nice idea for, say, Russia
in 1920, Germany in 1936, or China in 1955, but it won’t work in
America in 2006 or beyond.
The
modern reactionary totalitarian overlooks many factors, beginning
with the size of human populations and the individual human tendency
to pursue self-interested goals. While the Fed successfully pumped
up the stock market bubble and the real estate bubble, which has
affected both Europe and Asia, and consequently damaged thousands
of marginal "investors," it has failed to significantly
damage the reservoir of wealth in middle-class hands across the
planet, not just in the US. People around the world watch the US,
British, and Australian political march backwards warily and correctly
translate it into their wealth at risk, which in turn translates
into threatening the credit of the backward states. Concentration
camps? A universal draft? Our planet’s elite might like the idea,
but not if it’s going to drown them too when the ship goes down;
if America sinks, all sink, and they know it.
I
believe that our political con-artists would like us to ignore the
world picture or at least keep us ignorant, but the Internet has
destroyed such wishful thinking. The people are no longer standing
backwards.
July
7, 2006
Robert
Klassen [send him mail]
retired from a forty-year career in critical-care respiratory therapy.
He is the author of five books, including Atlantis:
A Novel about Economic Government,
and Economic
Government, which describe a solution
to the problem of political government. Here's
his web site.
Copyright
© 2006 Robert Klassen
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