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War, As Seen Through Your Personal Filter
by
Bill Sardi
by Bill Sardi
All people
have some sort of set of ideas about life. Those ideas govern
how we interpret events and help humans reject falsehoods and intellectual
“garbage.” Humans must discriminate between what is
true and what is a false, or be sold the Brooklyn Bridge time and
again. But our self-held ideas also may filter out what is
real because it doesn’t fit our pre-held concept of reality.
Why we go
to war
War is a topic
that evokes considerable conversation and challenges long-held beliefs.
One might say America goes to war to preserve democracy, or to rescue
the downtrodden women in Afghanistan, or the tortured in Iraq.
In the past it was the fight against creeping Communism in Korea,
or the regime in Bosnia.
In the past
it is said the U.S. had gone to war against the Vietnamese who attacked
a U.S. Navy vessel in the Gulf of Tonkin, or against the Japanese
who conducted a surprise attack upon Pearl Harbor, or against the
Germans who sunk the USS Lusitania filled with innocent vacationers
in the mid-Atlantic.
We don’t actually
know these events happened as claimed, we just have been told they
occurred as most history books describe them. In reality,
a German U-boat sunk the Lusitania which was carrying a load of
munitions. The U.S. was the first to fire a shot at Pearl
Harbor, sinking a Japanese submarine outside the harbor hours before
Japanese planes dropped their bombs on moored ships. U.S.
aircraft carriers had been moved out of the harbor and sent to sea
the week prior. The U.S. citizenry wasn’t told Japan was provoked
into war when the U.S. blocked oil deliveries from Indonesia.
Japan had closed all its embassies in the Pacific rim days prior
to Pearl Harbor, an overt sign of impending conflagration, but the
public was never told. And more recently, government authorities
now admit the Gulf of Tonkin incident never happened.
Baseball
as an example
To gain a better
understanding of how our personal filter works, let me deviate momentarily
on the subject of sports, namely baseball. We all have a favorite
sports team we root for. When we view a referee’s call that
favors our team, we never argue with it. When we view a referee’s
call against our team, we generally think the referee made a bad
call. But it almost never enters our mind that the game might
be rigged. (What of those bad calls in the most recent Super Bowl?)
Modern baseball
is a marketed game, and a game played by teams that are part of
a franchise. The teams split TV money, home ticket sales,
etc. In recent years what has been observed is that the team
that wins the Division Championship or World Series is often the
team with the newest stadium or the newest franchise. Payment
for the new stadium requires greater attendance and a winning team.
For example,
the Arizona Diamondbacks were a new expansion major league team
in 1998 and in their first five seasons of existence, the Diamondbacks
won three division titles including a World Series in 2001.
The Anaheim
(Los Angeles) Angels won the World Series in 2002 and then sold
to Arturo Moreno for $180 million in 2003. Did Baseball “allow”
the Angels to win so one of its franchisees could garner a good
selling price for the team the next year?
The Cleveland
Indians opened a new ballpark, Jacobs Field, in 1994. The
Indians won the Pennant the next year and four consecutive Division
Titles thereafter.
The Florida
Marlins won the 1997 World Series one year after starting a new
franchise in Miami.
One report
says: “Florida fooled the forecasters again throughout
the playoffs, beating the odds and battling back in each of their
three series victories.” Promo for a book about the Marlins
World Series championship says: “Winning the World Series, especially
against an experienced New York Yankees club whose payroll was more
than triple the size of Florida’s, was just another David versus
Goliath challenge that was gladly met by the Little Teal Machine.”
Cuban-born
Livan Hernandez was the World Series MVP for the Marlins.
In the World Series games Hernandez pitched, TV commentators replayed
pitches that clearly missed home plate but were called strikes.
Hernandez won 9 games and lost 3, and won 2 World Series games that
year. In his 10 subsequent years playing baseball, he only
has won 50% of the time. Was Hernandez made into a Cuban-born
baseball hero in Miami in order to draw in the Latin crowd in that
city?
Baseball is
loved by many, and who is to spoil the fun of an afternoon rooting
for your favorite team while eating a hot dog, or ruin a 13-year-old
boy’s dreams of playing major league baseball some day. The
point is, we want to live this baseball fantasy, so we overlook
the obvious. The sports commentators dare not utter a negative
word to destroy the dreams that fans want to see.
Easily fooled
The point is
here, if we can be easily fooled by fixed baseball games that are
viewed and replayed for analysis on television, before fans very
eyes, imagine how easy it is to fool the populace when it comes
to war.
I ask people
who come to visit in my home, more recently three church-going individuals,
the CEO of a company that sells trace minerals for dietary supplements,
a former assistant district attorney, and a flag-waving marketing
specialist. I ask, just exactly what happened to building
7 at the World Trade Center that collapsed exactly as the other
two towers that were hit by aircraft and claimed to have collapsed
due to heat from aircraft fuel, when no plane hit building 7?
The company
CEO responded by saying, “I’ll bet you’re going to tell me the
government had something to do with it.” The attorney
said: “Two-thousand Americans died. That’s evidence
enough it was terrorists.” The marketing specialist, who
claims the President is her hero, didn’t know what to think.
The point is,
these people aren’t ready, or even willing, to investigate further.
Why burst their bubble, their pre-held beliefs that America is the
defender of liberty and all that is right in the world, is what
they hold dearest. Would they be willing to even consider
that they may have been duped by the events that unfolded on September
11, 2001?
I asked them,
why did CNN begin airing a documentary (“Beneath The Veil”)
about women in Afghanistan being mistreated, a month prior to 9-11?
(A war propaganda film?) Why did CNN break its broadcast news
of the events unfolding in New York immediately after 9-11 and take
their viewing audience to Kabul, Afghanistan, to report a leader
who was trying to overthrow the ruling Taliban, had been killed?
What link could there have possibly been between the events in New
York and Middle-Eastern terrorists on the planes, who not only were
not Afghani, but were not identified till days later? The
FBI claims it didn’t know of these fellows.
We don’t want
our favorite baseball player to fail. We don’t want our favorite
President to be picked on unfairly. What is obvious will be
interpreted as unfair criticism. We will first react by “going
to bat” for “our team,” or “our country.”
When will we
ever put ourselves in a position to honestly evaluate the facts,
to confirm what we are told about the events that unfold before
our very eyes?
War only exists
because we are so gullible. We are blindly patriotic to a
fault.
The predicted
explosion of a “dirty nuke” on U.S. soil will provoke patriots
to write me letters saying, you see, there really are terrorists.
I don’t doubt there are, but like the Japanese, are they being provoked
into these acts?
The report
of a “dirty nuke” explosion would likely trigger public retaliation
against any imagined foe. Yet, scientists tell us a “dirty
nuke” would not yield fission, it would just spread radioactive
material in a local area. How would the public be in any position
to evaluate, early on, whether the identification of the bombers
by government leaders is real or pre-arranged propaganda?
Why thousands of young American boys will sign up for the military
to defend America before the government’s identification of a terrorist
perpetrator can be scrutinized. Why many will say, “We
already know who did this, it’s those turban-heads in the Middle
East! Why do we need to confirm anything?”
Yes, why do
we need to confirm anything?
February
22, 2006
Bill
Sardi [send
him mail] is
a consumer advocate and health journalist, writing from San Dimas,
California. He offers a free downloadable book, The Collapse of
Conventional Medicine, at his
website.
Copyright
© 2006 Bill Sardi Word of Knowledge Agency, San Dimas, California.
Not intended for commercial use or posting on other websites. Permission
to reprint should be obtained from
the author.
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