The
Mother of All Messes
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
DIGG THIS
Republicans
are sending around the Internet a photo of a cute little boy whose
T-shirt reads: "The mess in my pants is nothing compared to
the mess Democrats will make of this country if they win Nov. 2nd."
One can only
wonder at the insouciance of this message. Are Republicans unaware
of the amazing mess the Bush regime has made? It is impossible to
imagine a bigger mess. Republicans have us at war in two countries
as a result of Republican lies and deceptions, and we might be in
two more wars – Iran and Pakistan – by November. We have alienated
the entire Muslim world and most of the rest.
The dollar
has lost 60% of its value against the euro, and the once mighty
dollar is losing its reserve currency role.
The Republicans’
policies have driven up the price of both oil and gold by 400%.
Inflation is
in double digits. Employment is falling.
The Republican
economy in the 21st century has been unable to create
net new jobs for Americans except for low-wage domestic services
such as waitresses, bartenders, retail clerks and hospital orderlies.
Republican deregulation brought about fraud in mortgage lending
and dangerous financial instruments which have collapsed the housing
market, leaving a million or more homeowners facing foreclosure.
The financial system is in disarray and might collapse from insolvency.
The trade and budget deficits have exploded. The US trade deficit
is larger than the combined trade deficits of every deficit country
in the world.
The US can
no longer finance its wars or its own government and relies on foreign
loans to function day to day. To pay for its consumption, the US
sells its existing assets – companies, real estate, toll roads,
whatever it can offer – to foreigners.
Republicans
have run roughshod over the US Constitution, Congress, the courts
and civil liberties. Republicans have made it perfectly clear that
they believe that our civil liberties make us unsafe – precisely
the opposite view of our Founding Fathers. Yet, Republicans regard
themselves as the Patriotic Party.
The Republicans
have violated the Nuremberg prohibitions against war crimes, and
they have violated the Geneva Conventions against torture and abuse
of prisoners. Republican disregard for human rights ranks with that
of history’s great tyrants.
The Republicans
have put in place the foundation for a police state. I am confident
that the Democrats, too, will make a mess. But can they beat this
record?
We must get
the Republicans totally out of power, or we will have no country
left for the Democrats to mess up.
I say this
as a person who has done as much for the Republican Party as anyone.
I helped to devise and to get implemented an economic policy that
cured stagflation and that brought Republicans back into political
competition after Watergate. If I could have looked into a crystal
ball and seen that under a free trade banner, Republicans would
enable corporate executives to pay themselves millions of dollars
in "performance pay" for deserting their American work
forces and hiring foreigners in their place, thus destroying the
aspirations and careers of millions of Americans, I never would
have helped the Republicans. If a crystal ball had revealed that
a neoconned Republican Party would launch wars of naked aggression
against countries that posed no threat to the United States, I would
have shouted my warnings even earlier.
The neoconned
Republican Party is the greatest threat America has ever faced.
Let me tell you why.
How many Republicans
can you name who respect and honor the Constitution? There are Ron
Paul, Bob Barr, and who? The ranks of Republican constitutional
supporters quickly grow thin.
The reason
is that Republicans view the Constitution as a coddling device for
criminals and terrorists. Republicans think the Constitution can
be set aside for evil-doers and kept in place for everyone else.
But without the Constitution we only have the government’s word
as to who is an evil-doer.
This would
be the word of the same infallible government that told us that
Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction that were on
the verge of being used against America, the same infallible government
that told us that Guantanamo prison held "770 of the most dangerous
persons alive" and then, after stealing 5 years of their lives,
quietly released 500 of them as mistaken identities.
Republicans
think the United States is the salt of the earth and that American
hegemony over the rest of the world is not only justified by our
great virtue but necessary to our safety. People this full of hubris
are incapable of judgment. People incapable of judgment should never
be given power.
Republicans
have no sympathy for anyone but their own kind. How many Republicans
do you know who care a hoot about the plight of the poor, the jobless,
the medically uninsured? The government programs that Republicans
are always adamant to cut are the ones that help people who need
help.
I have yet
to hear any of my Republican friends express any concern whatsoever
for the 1.2 million Iraqis who have died, and the 4 million who
have been displaced, as a result of Bush’s gratuitous invasion.
Many tell me that the five- and six-year-long wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
are due to wimpy Americans "who don’t have the balls it takes"
to win. Killing and displacing a quarter of the Iraqi population
is just a wimpy result of a population that lacks testosterone.
Real Americans would have killed them all by now. Macho patriotic
Republicans are perfectly content for US foreign policy to be controlled
by Israel. Republican evangelical "christian" churches
teach their congregations that America’s purpose in the world is
to serve Israel. And these are the flag-wavers.
Those of us
who think America is the Constitution, and that loyalty means loyalty
to the Constitution, not to office holders or to a political party
or to a foreign country, are regarded by Republicans as "anti-American."
Neoconservatives,
such as Billy Kristol, insist that loyalty to the country means
loyalty to the government. Thus, criticizing the government for
launching wars of aggression and for violating constitutionally
protected civil liberties is, according to neoconservatives, a disloyal
act.
In the neoconservative
view, there is no place for the voices of citizens: the government
makes the decisions, and loyal citizens support the government’s
decisions.
In the neocon
political system there is no liberty, no democracy, no debate. Dissenters
are traitors.
The
neoconservative magazine, Commentary, wants the New York
Times indicted for telling Americans that the Bush regime was
caught violating US law, specifically the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Act, by spying on Americans without obtaining warrants as required
by law. Note that neoconservatives think it is a criminal act for
a newspaper to tell its readers that their government is spying
on them illegally.
Judging by
their behavior, a number of Democrats go along with the neocon view.
Thus, the Democrats don’t offer a greatly different profile. They
went along with the views that corporate profits and the war on
terror take precedence over everything else. They have not used
the congressional power that the electorate gave them in the 2006
elections.
However,
Democrats, or at least some of them, do care about the Constitution.
If it were not for Democratic appointees to the federal courts and
the ACLU (essentially a Democratic organization), the Bush regime
would have completely destroyed our civil liberties. Some Democrats
are "bleeding hearts," who actually care about suffering
people they don’t know, and who think that we have obligations to
others. Have you ever heard of a bleeding heart Republican?
Traditionally,
Democrats objected whenever policies resulted in a handful of rich
people capturing all of the income gains from the economy. There
might still be a few such Democrats left. Looking at the Republican
mess, I doubt that Democrats, try as they may, can equal it.
July
23, 2008
Paul
Craig Roberts [send
him mail] a
former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury and former associate
editor of the Wall Street Journal, has been reporting shocking cases
of prosecutorial abuse for two decades. A new edition of his book,
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions,
co-authored with Lawrence Stratton, a documented account of how
Americans lost the protection of law, has just been released by
Random House.
Copyright
© 2008 Creators Syndicate
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