NeoAmerica
by Jim Panyard
by
Jim Panyard
DIGG THIS
A long time
ago in a country that seems far, far away, I was raised to believe
this nation was special and rose above the class distinction, deceit,
political megalomania and human depravity that pockmarked the rest
of the globe.
America was
a symbol of fair play, justice and righteousness. We wore the white
hats. We didn’t start conflicts. We finished them. We minded our
own business and mined the bounties with which the continent had
been blessed. We were, as was no one else, a free people. Our word
was our bond. John Wayne was the symbol of what it meant to be a
man.
I was too young
to realize then that the victors write history.
Still, it was
a myth that was generally bought into and accepted by most Americans.
It set societal norms.
Those days
are gone now.
Can any adult
over 50 today imagine the President of the United States sanctioning
torture of prisoners to obtain information? That’s what the Japs
or Nazis or North Koreans or Viet Cong did. Not us. Right?
Well, not completely
right. There was the My Lai massacre and some other atrocities,
but even in those cases brought to light there was some disciplinary
action taken against the perpetrators.
Now, the Attorney
General of the United States, the nation’s top law enforcement official,
has said he can’t say whether "water boarding," a repeated
near-death experience, is torture or not. He did say that
if it were used on him, he would consider it torture. H-m-m-m.
Is that intellectual dishonesty? I suppose it is fortunate he was
not asked his opinion on sleep deprivation, genital shocking or
fingernail ripping. That’s what those heartless Viet Cong did to
our boys.
But, enough
of this "goody-too-shoes" attitude. The Duke is dead and
the world has changed.
We are fighting
for not only our own survival, but to free all the oppressed people
of the world. The American Empire must continue to expand for the
good of those ignorant peasants around the world who don’t know
how bad they have it. It is not for the burgeoning American military-industrial
complex we have more than 900 bases around the globe ready to deliver
"shock and awe" at a moment’s notice, it is for the enslaved
we must free. It is not for corporate America we stand on guard,
but to assure Third World nations can buy refrigerators and television
sets allowing them to be saturated by our American culture.
Of course there
might be "collateral damage," but you can’t make an omelet
without breaking a few eggs.
As each day
passes, our government at all levels becomes increasingly secretive.
For our own collective good, of course.
While I once
thought the struggle in Pennsylvania over having government records
open to the people who pay the bills was unique, I was surprised
to find the same struggle is going on in the state of Florida. And,
Lord knows, where else in this new nation our leaders have built
for us.
Space prohibits
going into the clandestine activities taking place in and around
Sodom on the Potomac, but it is not only the Central Intelligence
Agency keeping people in the dark. The Constitution has become a
historic relic and is turning out to be, as its critics have noted,
a "political document." Hurry to the National Archives
to see it, while it is still on display.
Congress has
relinquished its duties to the Imperial Presidency and the last
thing between the people and totalitarian government is the court
system. Who appoints the judges? Congress and the President, of
course.
Ever get the
feeling there are not 52 cards in this deck or, at least, more than
four aces?
Meanwhile,
Americans are forced to play the hand they are dealt.
Those in power
should pray the United States is never vanquished in a war, because
the War Crimes Trials headed by someone other than Anglos might
put them in a difficult position.
However, as
long as we are the lone Super Power, that is unlikely.
In the interim,
one is reminded on the action hero-philosopher king of the 1970s,
Billy Jack, who said, "When policemen break the law, there
is no law. Just a fight for survival."
February
11, 2008
Jim Panyard
[send him mail] is the
retired president of the Pennsylvania Manufacturers' Association
and lives in Palmyra, PA.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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