The 'Ism' at the Gate
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
If
you look at the past 100 years or so, you will see plainly that
there has always been an "ism" at the gates.
The old idea of controlling the people and increasing government
power by warning of an "enemy at the gates" dates back
to the Roman Empire, and probably well before that. It is among
those tactics that are obvious to any dishonest person coveting
power.
The first isms at the gate were socialism, pacifism and anarchism;
then came fascism; next was communism; and now it's terrorism. The
advantage of all the isms is that they appeal directly to another
ism nationalism, which is about the only one of the isms
the great mass of people can comprehend.
Most people can't tell you differences between socialism, communism,
fascism or anarchism, but everyone knows who he or she is, and who
isn't one of the group. "By God, I'm an American, and those
guys ain't."
Don't feel insulted. The human brain is wired to recognize differences.
Be honest. If you're white and you meet a black person, what first
registers? His blackness. And vice versa. The priority of noticing
differences was probably a needed survival skill when humans lived
in caves. Most primitive tribes lived by the rule that every stranger
was an enemy until he proved himself to be a friend. As a matter
of fact, that's still a good rule to live by.
What Americans ought to realize, however, is that the Establishment
fans the fear about the current ism in order to increase its power
and make money. You should know, for example, that American capitalists
and American capital built a great deal of the Soviet Union's infrastructure,
even long after the Cold War started. In fact, while Americans were
dying presumably to fight communism in Vietnam, the U.S. was trading
with communism in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union, and protecting
it in Cuba.
Establishment types never allow principle to interfere with their
money-seeking. I recall a quote in a major financial newspaper by
the then- president of one of America's largest banks. He had been
asked if he felt uncomfortable making loans to communist Poland.
"We don't care what kind of government they have," he
said, "as long as they pay their bills."
I cherish that quote, along with one from an anonymous Kuwaiti who,
when asked why he was not fighting to liberate his country from
Iraq, replied: "Why should I? That's what our American slaves
are for."
The war on terrorism is phony. True, 19 of Osama bin Laden's boys
were able to hit us pretty hard, thanks to luck and our own government's
incompetence. But that was one organization and one hit. President
Bush, after he got his instructions from the Establishment, declared
war on every underground organization in the world, 95 percent of
which were not even thinking of us, much less thinking about attacking
us.
Colombian rebels are against the Colombian government; Irish Republicans
oppose British control of Northern Ireland; Palestinian groups are
fighting Israeli occupation; and so on and so on. People employing
guerrilla-war tactics to seek independence, an end to occupation,
the overthrow of a dictator or to attain some degree of autonomy
are not our enemies.
Bin Laden is our enemy, and we should have concentrated on him.
As it is, President Bush's declaration of war on terrorism (a mistake
on its face, because terrorism is a tactic, not a state) sent a
message to every head of state in the world: If people oppose your
government, call them terrorists, and you have our blessing to kill
and torture to your heart's desire.
The question is, When are we, the American people, going to stop
being saps and realize that the foreign devils du jour are always
designed to distract us from the ills, sins and injustices taking
place in our own country? I suspect the answer is "never."
I've come to believe that when the Founding Fathers said people
were smart enough to govern themselves, they made a mistake. I,
of course, include myself among the saps having believed in and
been disappointed by many politicians.
May
28, 2005
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years, reporting on everything
from sports to politics. From 1969 to 1971, he worked as a campaign
staffer for gubernatorial, senatorial and congressional races in
several states. He was an editor, assistant to the publisher, and
columnist for the Orlando Sentinel from 1971 to 2001. He
now writes a syndicated column which is carried on LewRockwell.com.
Reese served two years active duty in the U.S. Army as a tank gunner.
Write to Charley Reese at P.O. Box 2446, Orlando, FL 32802.
©
2005 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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