America’s
IQ in Inverse Proportion to Its Yellow Ribbon Count
by
Michael Nolan
by Michael Nolan
Consider
the following three propositions:
- H. L. Mencken
was right when he said that no one ever went broke underestimating
the intelligence of the American people.
- Joseph Goebbels
was right in his observation that the bigger the lie, the easier
it is for people to believe it.
- George W.
Bush is lying when he insists that his administration supports
the troops.
Quick
now, what two-word phrase gives truth to all three statements? The
answer is, of course, Iraq War.
The
fact that Americans sit still, repeatedly, to be told that the war
in Iraq enhances their safety at home makes fresh Mencken’s famous
and timeless insult. That they carry on like ladies and gentlemen
when told that US soldiers are dying in order to advance democracy
and peace in the Middle East illustrates Herr Goebbels’ point quite
nicely.
And
then there’s item three: Mr. Bush’s assertion that he and his administration
support the troops is a lie so big, so monstrous, so transparent,
so insulting to the nation’s intelligence that one fears for the
future of democracy when, after all we have seen, there is anyone
out there who still believes it
At
the onset of the war, President Bush sent our troops into the jaws
of hell without the proper armament on their vehicles. And why would
they be armored? Dick Cheney had just finished telling them that
they would be welcomed as liberators. Cheney knew better. It was
a deliberate lie to rush us into a war that he and his buddies at
the neocon stink tanks (like JINSA, whence Cheney came) had hoped
for since before 9/11.
And
yet, in a wartime re-election campaign, the War Machine convinced
a bare majority that Bush was a better man than his opponent because
you guessed it – he supported the troops.
In
December of 2004 Donald Rumsfeld was asked, publicly, by a US soldier
in Kuwait why the humvees still didn't have the proper armament.
Rumsfeld forthrightly blamed it on a backup at the armor factory.
But there was no backup at the armor factory. Factory spokesmen
verified that in fact they were operating under capacity, for
lack of orders. Had this administration really supported the troops,
Bush would have fired the murderous old coot before his plane had
returned from Kuwait. How did Americans react to this debacle? Did
they demand Rumsfeld's head on a platter? Did they call for Bush's
impeachment? No, these latter-day Thomas Paines affixed yet more
Yellow Ribbons to their SUVs, admonishing anyone stuck behind them
in traffic to support the troops.
Just
this August, General Richard Myers, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, admitted that US troops were faced with the possibility
of third-time deployments to Iraq. Why would not George Bush, a
self-described war president, get on the bully pulpit and ask for
volunteers to replace the young men and women who have suffered
far beyond their fair share in serving the nation? The Bush handlers
know damned well that no one would step forward. What support that
does exist for this war is rotten at its core, based on obscene,
imperial fantasies and assumptions that other people’s kids will
fight in it. Still, isn't it Bush’s duty to look the camera in the
eye and say to the nation, Uncle Sam needs you?
Richard
Perle, former Defense Policy Board chairman and adviser to the defense
department, remarked to writer and military expert Tom Clancy that
Colin Powell was a “wuss” for having worried about the safety of
American troops. Did those in the administration condemn this outright?
For the well-being of the soldiers, did they pledge never to utilize
Perle in any capacity, official or advisory, again? Did our de-clawed
media make an issue of it? Fellow neocon, Michael Ledeen, in a 2003
speech to the American Enterprise Institute, asserted our nation’s
insatiable lust for war by claiming that “What we hate is not casualties
but losing.” Ledeen is a close adviser to Karl Rove (and therefore,
at times, Bush's brain's brain). Can it be that American parents
don't hate casualties, since no one has raised hell about the presence
of a monster like Ledeen in the administration?
None
of the above is arcane knowledge, gleaned from academic sources
or obscure web sites. Even the mainstream media (no slaves to the
“afflict the comfortable” school of investigative journalism) reported
this stuff. That America still dispatches its young men and women
to the slaughterhouse, knowing the character and the track records
of the men in charge, demands a refreshed view of American witlessness
that, in balance, will render Mencken’s grousings kindly and avuncular.
September
21, 2005
Michael
Nolan [send him mail] is a
freelance writer from Taunton, MA. His work recently appeared in
Common Dreams and OpEdNews.com. His fiction has appeared in the
Dublin Writers Workshop Electric Acorn. He is currently finishing
a novel.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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