Catastrophe Looms
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
Two recent
polls, a Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg poll and a New York
Times/CBS News poll, indicate why Bush is getting away with
impeachable offenses. Half of the US population is incapable of
acquiring, processing and understanding information.
Much of the
problem is the media itself, which serves as a disinformation agency
for the Bush administration. Fox "News" and right-wing
talk radio are the worst, but with propagandistic outlets setting
the standard for truth and patriotism, all of the media is affected
to some degree.
Despite the
media’s failure, about half the population has managed to discern
that the US invasion of Iraq has not made them safer and that the
Bush administration’s assault on civil liberties is not a necessary
component of the war on terror. The problem, thus, lies with the
absence of due diligence on the part of the other half of the population.
Consider the
New York Times/CBS poll. Sixty-four percent of the respondents
have concerns about losing civil liberties as a result of anti-terrorism
measures put in place by President Bush. Yet, 53 percent approve
of spying without obtaining court warrants "in order to reduce
the threat of terrorism."
Why does any
American think that spying without a warrant has any more effect
in reducing the threat of terrorism than spying with a warrant?
The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which Bush is disobeying,
requires the executive to obtain from a secret panel of federal
judges a warrant for spying on Americans. The purpose of the law
is to prevent a president from spying for partisan political reasons.
The law permits the president to spy first (for 72 hours) and then
come to the court for permission. As the court meets in secret,
spying without a warrant is no more effective in reducing the threat
of terrorism than spying with a warrant.
Instead of
explaining this basic truth, the media has played along with
the Bush administration and formulated the question as a trade-off
between civil liberties and protection from terrorists. This formulation
is false and nonsensical. Why does the media enable the Bush administration
to escape accountability for illegal behavior by putting false and
misleading choices before the people?
The LA Times/Bloomberg
poll has equally striking anomalies. Only 43 percent said they approved
of Bush’s performance as president. But a majority believe Bush’s
policies have made the US more secure.
It is extraordinary
that anyone would think Americans are safer as a result of Bush
invading two Muslim countries and constantly threatening two more
with military attack. The invasions and threats have caused a dramatic
swing in Muslim sentiment away from the US. Prior to Bush’s invasion
of Iraq, a large majority of Muslims had a favorable opinion of
America. Now only about 5 percent do.
A number of
US commanders in Iraq and many Middle East experts have told the
American public that the three year-old war in Iraq is serving both
to recruit and to train terrorists for al Qaeda, which has grown
many times its former size. Moreover, the US military has concluded
that al Qaeda has succeeded in having its members elected to the
new Iraqi government.
We have seen
similar developments both in Egypt and in Pakistan. In the recent
Egyptian elections, the radical Muslim Brotherhood, despite being
suppressed by the Egyptian government, won a large number of seats.
In Pakistan elements friendly or neutral toward al Qaeda control
about half of the government. In Iraq, Bush’s invasion has replaced
secular Sunnis with Islamist Shia allied with Iran.
And now with
the triumph of Hamas in the Palestinian election, we see the total
failure of Bush’s Middle Eastern policy. Bush has succeeded in displacing
secular moderates from Middle Eastern governments and replacing
them with Islamic extremists. It boggles the mind that this disastrous
result makes Americans feel safer!
What does it
say for democracy that half of the American population is unable
to draw a rational conclusion from unambiguous facts?
Americans share
this disability with the Bush administration. According to news
reports, the Bush administration is stunned by the election victory
of the radical Islamist Hamas Party, which swept the US-financed
Fatah Party from office. Why is the Bush administration astonished?
The Bush administration
is astonished because it stupidly believes that hundreds of millions
of Muslims should be grateful that the US has interfered in their
internal affairs for 60 years, setting up colonies and puppet rulers
to suppress their aspirations and to achieve, instead, purposes
of the US government.
Americans
need desperately to understand that 95 percent of all Muslim terrorists
in the world were created in the past three years by Bush’s invasion
of Iraq.
Americans need
desperately to comprehend that if Bush attacks Iran and Syria, as
he intends, terrorism will explode, and American civil liberties
will disappear into a thirty-year war that will bankrupt the United
States.
The
total lack of rationality and competence in the White House and
the inability of half of the US population to acquire and understand
information are far larger threats to Americans than terrorism.
America has
become a rogue nation, flying blind, guided only by ignorance and
hubris. A terrible catastrophe awaits.
January
28, 2006
Dr.
Roberts [send him mail]
is
Chairman of the Institute for Political Economy and Research Fellow
at the Independent Institute.
He is a former associate editor of the Wall Street Journal,
former contributing editor for National Review, and a former
assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury. He is the co-author of
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2006 Creators Syndicate
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