The Empire Is Over
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
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The American
government has come to resemble the characters in The
Wizard of Oz. We have the Cowardly Congress, a president
without a brain, and a foreign-policy establishment without a heart.
Our politicians
are still trying to play the empire game long after the age of empires
has ended. Blinded by arrogance, they cannot see that with every
passing day, the world needs us less and less and hates us more
and more. We are passing through that phase when the grandeur of
the empire exists only in the minds of politicians who have insulated
themselves from reality.
A friend of
mine, a classical scholar, sometimes tells his students, "No
one woke up one morning in 476 A.D. and said, 'Gee, I'm in the Dark
Ages.'" The transition from the heyday of Roman power to a
stage of barbarism was a gradual process. We are in a process of
change. No one is going to announce on TV that the U.S. is no longer
a superpower.
Nevertheless,
the signs are there if you look for them. A nation that was able
to help crush the Axis powers in three and a half years hasn't won
a war since then. We have had four years of struggling with an insurgency
in a small, poor and broken country. Our economy is shaky under
mountains of debt. Half of our people make less than 42,000 inflated
dollars a year.
Where we were
once the arsenal of democracy, today there is hardly a major weapons
system that doesn't rely on imports of one kind or another. Much
of the industry that is left is foreign-owned. Japan, which once
lay prostrate, dominates the American car market. It is extremely
difficult to find anything today that is not made in China or some
other cheap-labor country.
In the meantime,
the cowardly Congress doesn't have the guts to tackle any of the
major problems confronting the American people. Our president continues
to embarrass us practically every time he opens his mouth in public.
The foreign-policy establishment is riddled with aging draft dodgers
agitating for more wars against small countries, of course.
True, we still
have lots of nuclear weapons, but do you think any American president
would want to get into a nuclear shooting match with China or Russia?
Look at how we reacted to two airplanes crashing into two office
buildings. What do you think we would do if San Diego, Los Angeles
and San Francisco became radioactive ruins with millions of casualties?
We are not prepared mentally, spiritually or materially to deal
with a nuclear war.
We are like
all empires in their final stages. We have grown soft. We like our
comforts. We don't wish to be inconvenienced. We like poor Mexicans
to do our stoop work and poor Americans to do our fighting, provided
they do it far away so we won't be disturbed by explosions and screams.
We enjoy our decadence, and there are always people in the media
who can rationalize anything, no matter how sick and revolting it
is.
As
for trying to understand the world, we are just too busy being amused
and following the adventures of Britney Spears and other celebrities.
We like to let the TV and the politicians do our thinking for us.
It saves energy. They tell us whom to hate.
The only way
to avoid a bad end is to find some realists and put them in public
office. We need a brave Congress, not a pack of cowards. We desperately
need a president with a brain. We need to retire the warmongers
in the foreign-policy establishment. Otherwise, we will join the
other third-rate countries, once empires, on history's discard pile.
September
29, 2007
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2007 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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