Boogey Bull
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
DIGG THIS
There are
over a half-million foreign students at American colleges and universities;
the U.S. borders, for all practical purposes, remain wide open;
only 6 percent of the shipping containers are checked; and there
is still an overgenerous number of legal immigrants admitted.
I offer this
as an antidote to the Bush administration's boogeyman stories about
the threat of terrorism. There is a threat, of course, but it is
far less than the administration would have you believe. Americans
are much more likely to die in automobile crashes or from falls
or at the hands of a 100 percent American criminal than they are
from a terrorist attack.
The most active
terrorist organizations in America, according to FBI testimony,
are the animal-rights activists. For some reason, you never see
terrorism "experts" from the network Rolodex files talking
about animal-rights activists.
The Bush administration
greatly inflated the number of terrorist acts by including every
attack in Iraq, whether it's sectarian violence, revenge killings,
common criminals or Iraqi insurgents who just don't want us occupying
their country. The claim that if "we weren't fighting them
in Iraq we'd be fighting them in the U.S." is childish nonsense.
It seems clearer
every day that the original purpose of the Iraqi invasion was not
the elimination of nonexistent weapons of mass destruction or the
installation of democracy which has been a failure
but simply an excuse to squat militarily on the second-largest oil
reserves in the world.
There is no
military solution to the war in Iraq, so how long we keep American
troops there boils down to how many more American lives you want
to sacrifice for nothing useful or beneficial. I say that one more
is too many, and the orders should be cut now to withdraw all American
forces. If the U.S. ambassador wants to stay in his palace in the
Green Zone, let him hire mercenaries to protect him. Iraq can hardly
become more chaotic than it is, and it might just calm itself down
once we are out of the picture.
The president's
war on terror has been fraudulent from the get-go. You can't wage
war on a tactic, and since there is no conceivable circumstance
where all the terrorists in the world would collect in one convenient
killing ground, you will never eliminate terrorists by military
means.
Terrorism
is a product of politics and of injustice, real or perceived. Since
human beings have no choice but to act on their perceptions, whether
the injustice is real or perceived doesn't matter. An injustice
will stick in a man's craw more painfully and longer than poverty
or unemployment.
Many people
perceive the U.S. foreign policy as hypocritical and unjust, yet
President Bush has made no effort whatsoever to change or modify
that policy. On the contrary, he has aggravated it so that we have
gone from the point where in 2001 we had most of the world's sympathy
to a point where in 2006 most despise our policies and view us as
a greater threat to peace than North Korea.
At
any rate, to assess risk, you need to know the facts. There aren't
many terrorists in the world, and only a small portion of those
direct their anger toward us. Check the mortality tables in any
almanac. You'll see clearly that you have more to fear from accidents,
too much cream pie, wobbly ladders or nature's own infectious agents
than you do from Osama bin Laden. He might want to kill you, but
wanting something and having the means to do it are two different
things.
November
28, 2006
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2006 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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