THE LIBERTARIAN
War:
Our Proudest Export
by
Vin Suprynowicz
It’s
a good thing the Social Security and military retirement programs
are actuarially solvent; the armed forces don’t need any more money
for live-fire training; and Americans have seen their taxes fall
till they can pay the remaining federal levies with pocket change
(leaving them vast sums to invest in the modernization of private
industry, not to mention pricey prescription medicines.)
Because
if that weren’t the case, one might wonder if our delegates to Washington
had temporarily taken leave of their senses, as the House of Representatives
this week voted to take $15 billion of our tax money, bundle it
up into huge bales, and drop it on harmless peasants overseas.
Note
I did not say they plan to take the $15 billion and simply drop
it in the ocean. As a measure to curb inflation, counteracting the
overuse of the currency printing presses in anticipation of that
dead-on-arrival "Y2K crisis" a couple of years back, that
might actually do some slight good.
Not
so the current plans. No, Congress intends to send $676 million
to (you’re to read this with a straight face, now) "fight drugs
and advance economic and political stability" in Colombia and
its neighboring South American republics ... an enterprise which
has proven about as effective to date as similar efforts in Southeast
Asia 35 years ago.
Where
most of this money actually goes, of course, is to prop up the oversized
armies of repulsive military dictatorships intent on putting down
local political insurgencies by burning farms and villages, in between
shooting down and killing Michigan missionaries and their babies.
To
keep pace with the arms race thus subsidized by U.S. taxpayers,
the rebels need more money, which they get by growing and selling
drugs (mostly to customers right back here in the U.S. of A.), increasing not
decreasing both the volume of the drug trade and the ruthlessness
of those who control it.
And
that $676 million is actually $55 million less than the Bush administration
wanted to spend on the CIA’s latest military-advisor full-employment
act.
Congress
did at least resist shifting more of these funds to bolster the
$100 million which will now be mailed to a select group of entrepreneurial
sub-Saharan kleptocrats who have figured out that (no matter how
many times they’ve defaulted on previous taxpayer-backed loans after
diverting most of that "food and medical aid" into their
personal bank accounts in Geneva and New York), the doors of the
international vaults can be made to swing open one more time if
they simply fudge up every traffic fatality as an "AIDS death,"
leading to much ululation at the reliably credulous U.N. about an
"AIDS crisis" which is supposedly wiping out the human
race on the continent of its birth.
(Has
the population of a single African nation dropped as predicted?
Which one? What reputable European or American accounting firm has
actually gone in and audited these "AIDS death rates"
on the ground? If the population of none of these nations actually
drops in the next decade, do we get the money back? This is, after
all, a part of the world where American retailers report you cannot
even reliably mail a package and expect any valuable contents
to reach their legal recipient.)
Then,
as virtual afterthoughts, apparently desperate to shovel out surplus
funds which have piled up hip-deep in the halls of the Capitol,
our delegates tack on $768 million for the surly thugs now in charge
of the former Soviet Union. (What is it they’ve done for us ...
or for anyone else ... lately? I can’t seem to recall. And heaven
forfend we should use this loot to compensate the heirs and descendents
of St. Petersburg property owners who had their stuff stolen in
1917, or to compensate the Hungarians for 1956, or the Czechs for
1968, or the brave Afghanis for that matter, simply mailing Mr.
Putin a receipt for his $768 million.)
Oh,
and $2 billion apiece in military aid to Egypt and Israel, apparently
on the theory that already heightened tensions in that region aren’t
good for much if we can’t get these two countries to go back to
war at least every couple of decades, providing some live test results
for our current weapons systems.
Your
U.S. Congress, trying every day in every way to prop up waste, fraud,
and tyranny around the globe.
July
30, 2001
Vin
Suprynowicz [send him mail] is
assistant editorial page editor of the Las Vegas Review-Journal.
Subscribe to his monthly newsletter by sending $72 to Privacy Alert,
561 Keystone Ave., Suite 684, Reno, NV 89503 or dialing 775-348-8591.
His book, Send
in the Waco Killers: Essays on the Freedom Movement, 1993-1998,
is available at 1-800-244-2224.
Copyright
2001 LewRockwell.com
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