Utah Mayor Speaks Truth To Power
Text of Mayor Anderson's speech
09/05/06 "ICH" -- --
Address by Mayor Ross C. "Rocky" Anderson Washington Square Salt
Lake City, Utah August 30, 2006
A patriot is a person who loves his or her country.
Who among you loves your country so much that you have come here
today to raise your voice out of deep concern for our nation —
and our world?
And who among you loves your country so much that you insist
that our nation's leaders tell us the truth?
So let's hear it: "Give us the truth! Give us the truth! Give us
the truth! Give us the truth! Give us the truth!" Because if we
had had the truth, we wouldn't be here today.
Let no one deny we are patriots. We support our nation's troops.
Let's hear it for our nation's troops! We have so many veterans
here today.
Let's here it for the veterans! We are grateful to our veterans
who have sacrificed so much for our freedoms. We love our
country, we hold dear the values upon which our nation was
founded, and we are distressed at what our President, our
administration, and our Congress are doing to, and in the name
of, our nation.
So to James Evans and these folks who financed this massive
radio campaign these last few days, let them understand that
blind faith in bad leaders is not patriotism.
A patriot does not tell people who are intensely concerned about
their country to just sit down and be quiet; to refrain from
speaking out in the name of politeness or for the sake of being
a good host; to show slavish, blind obedience and deference to a
dishonest, war-mongering, human-rights-violating president.
That is not a patriot. Rather, that person is a sycophant. That
person is a member of a frightening culture of obedience — a
culture where falling in line with authority is more important
than choosing what is right, even if it is not easy, safe, or
popular. And, I suspect, that person is afraid —afraid we are
right, afraid of the truth (even to the point of denying it),
afraid he or she has put in with an oppressive, inhumane, regime
that does not respect the laws and traditions of our country,
and that history will rank as the worst presidency our nation
has ever had to endure.
In response to those who believe we should blindly support this
disastrous president, his administration, and the complacent,
complicit Congress, listen to the words of Theodore Roosevelt, a
great president and, I might remind everyone, a Republican, who
said:
"The President is merely the most important among a large number
of public servants. He should be supported or opposed exactly to
the degree which is warranted by his good conduct or bad
conduct, his efficiency or inefficiency in rendering loyal,
able, and disinterested service to the Nation as a whole.
Therefore it is absolutely necessary that there should be full
liberty to tell the truth about his acts, and this means that it
is exactly necessary to blame him when he does wrong as to
praise him when he does right."
President Roosevelt continued: "Any other attitude in an
American citizen is both base and servile. To announce that
there must be no criticism of the President,"—listen up
Utah Republicans and James Evans, and all the good Republicans
listening today—"or that we are to stand by the President, right
or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally
treasonable to the American public. Nothing"—President Roosevelt
didn't stop there—"but the truth should be spoken about him or
any one else. But it is even more important to tell the truth,
pleasant or unpleasant, about him than about any one else."
Those were the words of Teddy Roosevelt, a great president who
knew the true meaning of patriotism. We are here today as
truth-tellers.
And we are here to demand: "Give us the truth! Give us the
truth! Give us the truth! Give us the truth!"
We are here today to insist that those who were elected to be
our leaders must tell us the truth.
We are here today to insist that our news media live up to its
sacred responsibility to ascertain and report the truth, that
our news media live up to its sacred responsibility to ascertain
and report the truth rather than acting like nothing more than a
bulletin board for the lies and propaganda of a manipulative,
dishonest federal government.
We have been getting just about everything but the truth on
matters of life and death, on matters upon which our nation's
reputation hinges, on matters that directly relate to our
nation's most fundamental values, and on matters relating to the
survival of our planet.
In the process, our nation has engaged in a tragic, unnecessary
war, based upon categorically false justifications. More than a
hundred thousand people have been killed — and many more have
been seriously maimed, brain damaged, or rendered mentally ill.
Our nation's reputation throughout much of the world has been
destroyed. We have many more enemies bent on our destruction
than before our invasion of Iraq. And the hatred toward us has
grown to the point that it will take many years, perhaps
generations, to overcome the loathing created by our
unjustified, illegal invasion and occupation of a Muslim nation.
What incredible ineptitude and callousness for our President to
talk about a Crusade while lying to us to make a case for the
invasion and occupation of a Muslim country!
Our children and later generations will pay the price of the
lies, the violence, the cruelty, the incompetence, and the
inhumanity of the Bush administration and the lackey Congress
that has so cowardly abrogated its responsibility and authority
under our checks-and-balances system of government.
We are here to say, "We will not stand for it any more. No more
lies. No more pre-emptive, illegal war, based on false
information. No more God-is-on-our-side religious nonsense to
justify this immoral, illegal war. We are here to say most
fundamentally, no more inhumanity in the name of our nation."
Let's raise our voices, and demand to the administration and our
news media, "Give us the truth! Give us the truth! Give us the
truth!"
Let's consider some of the most monstrous lies — lies that have
led us, like a nation of sheep, to this tragic war.
Following September 11, 2001, the world knew that Osama bin
Laden and al Qaeda were responsible for the horrific attacks on
our country. Our long-time allies were sympathetic and
supportive. But our president transformed that support into
international disdain for the United States, choosing to
illegally invade and occupy Iraq, rather than focus on and
capture the perpetrators of the 9/11 attacks.
Why invade and occupy Iraq when it was bin Laden and al Qaeda
who attacked our country and still haven't been brought to
justice? Vice President Dick Cheney and Condoleezza Rice
represented to us, without qualification, that there were strong
ties between Saddam Hussein and al Qaeda.
In September, 2002, President Bush made the incredible and
absolutely false claim that "You can't distinguish between al
Qaeda and Saddam."
President Bush represented to Congress, without any factual
basis whatsoever, that Iraq planned, authorized, committed, or
aided the 9/11 attacks.
Our President and Vice-President, along with an unquestioning
news media, repeatedly led our nation to believe that there was
a working relationship between al Qaeda and the Iraqi
government, a relationship that threatened the United States.
Even last week, when I met with Thomas Bock, the National
Commander of the American Legion, I asked him why we are engaged
in the war in Iraq. Why did we invade and occupy Iraq? He said,
"Why, of course, because of the 9/11 attacks on our country." I
asked, "What did Iraq have to do with those attacks?" He looked
puzzled, and said, "Well, the connection between al Qaeda and
Iraq."
I was shocked. I was stunned. Here is a man who has criticized
us for opposing the war in Iraq — and he is so completely wrong
about the underlying facts to justify this war.
Not only has there never been any evidence of any involvement by
Saddam or Iraq with the attacks on 9/11, but there has never
been any evidence of any operational connection whatsoever
between Saddam Hussein and al Qaeda.
And Colin Powell finally conceded that there is, and these are
his words, no "concrete evidence about the connection." "The
chairman of the monitoring group appointed by the United Nations
Security Council to track al Qaeda" disclosed that "his team had
found no evidence linking al Qaeda to Saddam Hussein." And the
top investigator for our European allies has said, 'If there
were (any) such links, we would have found them. But we have
found no serious connections whatsoever.'"
President Bush, by the way, finally admitted nine days ago on
Aug. 21 during a press conference that there was no connection
between the attacks on 9/11 and Iraq. It's terrific that the
President has now admitted what others have known for so long —
but where is the accountability for the tragic war we were led
into on the basis of his earlier misrepresentations?
Beside the fictions of Saddam Hussein somehow being linked to
the 9/11 attacks and his supposed connections with al Qaeda,
what was the principal justification for forgoing additional
weapons inspections, working with our allies toward a solution,
refraining from seeking additional resolutions from the United
Nations consistent with international law, and hurrying to war —
a so-called "pre-emptive" war — in which we would attack and
occupy a Muslim nation that posed no security risk to the United
States, and cause the deaths of so many thousands of innocent
men, women, and children — and the deaths and lifetime injuries
to so many thousands of our own servicemen and servicewomen?
The principal claim was that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass
destruction — biological and chemical weapons — and was seeking
to build up a nuclear weapons capability. As we now know, there
was nothing — no evidence whatsoever — to support those false
claims.
President Bush represented to us — and to people around the
world — that one of the reasons we needed to make war in Iraq —
and to do it right away — was because Saddam Hussein was seeking
to build nuclear weapons. His assertions about Saddam Hussein
trying to purchase nuclear materials from an African nation and
about Iraq seeking to obtain aluminum tubes for the enrichment
of uranium were challenged at the time by our own intelligence
agency and by our own scientists, yet President Bush failed to
tell us that!
Ten days, 10 days, before the invasion of Iraq, it was proven
that the documents upon which President Bush's claim about
Saddam Hussein trying to obtain uranium was based were
forgeries. That was found 10 days before we invaded Iraq.
However, President Bush did not disclose that to the American
people. By that failure, he betrayed each of us, he betrayed our
country, and he betrayed the cause of world peace.
Neither did the vast majority of the news media in this country
disclose the forgeries — until it was far too late. It took our
local newspapers here in Salt Lake City four months — until
after the war was commenced and until after President Bush
declared that major combat in Iraq was over — to report the
discovery that the documents were forgeries — and, therefore,
that there was no basis for the false claims about Saddam
Hussein trying to build up a nuclear capability. By its failure
to promptly disclose those forgeries, our news media betrayed us
as well.
Had the American people known we were being lied to — had
President Bush informed us that the documents were forged and
that he had no other basis for his claim — had our nation's
media done its job, rather than slavishly repeating to us the
lies being fed to it by the Bush administration — our nation
very well may not have allowed the commencement of this
outrageous, illegal, unjustified war.
Then-National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice said that
high-strength aluminum tubes acquired by Iraq were "only really
suited for nuclear weapons programs," warning "we don't want the
smoking gun to be a mushroom cloud."
Undisclosed by President Bush or Condoleezza Rice was the fact
that top nuclear scientists had informed the Administration that
those tubes were "too narrow, too heavy, too long" to be useful
in developing nuclear weapons and could be used for other
purposes. Dr. Mohamed El Baradei, director general of the
International Atomic Energy Agency, agreed.
So, so much for the phony claims of Saddam Hussein building
nuclear weapons, which were the primary claims justifying the
rush to war, without working with the United Nations, without
working with our long-time allies, without giving the weapons
inspectors an opportunity to do their job, which if they had
that opportunity they would have disclosed what we know now —
and that is there were no weapons of mass destruction. What were
we told about chemical and biological weapons of mass
destruction? These claims were as baseless and fraudulent as the
claims about nuclear weapons.
President Bush told us in his January 2003 State of the Union
address that Hussein had the materials to produce as much as 500
tons of sarin, mustard and VX nerve agent. Then, in May of 2003,
he made the outlandish statement that, it turns out to be
totally false, "We found the weapons of mass destruction. We
found biological laboratories."
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, the (same) secretary of
defense who assured us that the war would take maybe six days,
maybe six weeks, but he doubted as long as six months. He told
us at that time, "We know where the weapons of mass destruction
are." Vice President Cheney and then-Secretary of State Powell
also joined in the chorus of lies and misinformation about
weapons of mass destruction.
Of course, no stockpiles of biological or chemical weapons were
found. Bush Administration Weapons Inspector David Kay,
appointed by the Bush administration, noted that Iraq did not
have an ongoing chemical weapons program after 1991 — a
conclusion remarkably similar to statements made by Colin Powell
and Condoleezza Rice just months before the 9/11 attacks — and
before they sacrificed the truth in the service of promoting the
Bush administration's case for war against Iraq.
On February 24, 2001, less than 7 months before 9/11, Colin
Powell said that Saddam Hussein, and these were his words, "has
not developed any significant capability with respect to weapons
of mass destruction. He is unable to project conventional power
against his neighbors," said Colin Powell, some seven months
before 9/11.
And in July 2001, two months before 9/11, Condoleezza Rice said,
and these were her words: "We are able to keep his arms from
him. His military forces have not been rebuilt." She told us two
months before 9/11.
It is astounding how they changed their claims after the
President decided to make a case for the invasion and occupation
of Iraq!
To think that we could be lied to by so many members of the Bush
administration with such impunity is frightening — chilling. Yet
these imperious, arrogant, dishonest people think we should
continue to just fall in line with them and continue to take
them at their word after we have been lied to time after time
after time by these people.
The truth has been established. It is the established truth.
Iraq had nothing to do with the 9/11 attacks on the United
States. There is no evidence of any operational ties between
Iraq and al Qaeda. And there were no weapons of mass destruction
in Iraq.
What a tragedy, leading to greater tragedy. We are fed lie after
lie, our media reinforces those lies, and we are a nation that
has been led to a tragic, illegal, unprovoked war.
We are here today because of our values. We love our country. We
cherish the freedoms and liberties of our country. We don't call
those who speak out against our nation's leaders unpatriotic or
un-American or appeasers of fascists, as we heard from our
nation's secretary of defense yesterday. We have good, wholesome
family values. In our families, we teach honesty, we teach
kindness and compassion toward others, we teach that violence,
if ever justified, must be an absolutely last resort. In our
families, we teach that our nation's constitutional values are
to be upheld, and that they are worth standing up, as we are
here today, and fighting for. Our family values promote respect
and equal rights toward everyone, regardless of race, regardless
of ethnic origin, and regardless of sexual orientation. In our
families, we teach the value of hard work and competence — and
we are left to wonder about a President who, after receiving an
intelligence memo about the threat posed by al Qaeda, decides to
continue his month-long vacation — just before the 9/11 attacks
on our country.
As we demand the truth from others, let us also face the truth.
Our government all too often has not cared at all about the
human rights of people in other nations — and it doesn't really
care about democracy, unless it leads to the election of those
who will do our bidding.
Consider the irony regarding the claims that Saddam had chemical
weapons and, because of that, we needed to rush to war in Iraq.
When Saddam Hussein was using chemical weapons — first against
Iranians, then against his own people, the Kurds — our country
provided him with biological and chemical agents and equipment
to make the weapons. Presidents Reagan and George H.W. Bush
refused even to support economic sanctions, let alone go to war
against him, against Hussein for his use of weapons of mass
destruction. What did our nation do in response to Hussein's use
of chemical weapons, killing tens of thousand of people, when he
actually had them and we knew that he had them? We befriended,
coddled, and rewarded him — with government-guaranteed loans
totaling $5 billion since 1983, freeing up currency for Hussein
to modernize his military assets.
Perhaps those in the United States government who aided and
abetted Saddam Hussein to further US business interests, while
he was gassing the Kurds, should be sharing his courtroom dock
as he is now being tried for crimes against humanity.
No more lies, no more hiding of the truth — we can stand the
truth — no more wars that more than triple the value of stock in
Dick Cheney's prior employer, Halliburton — and which, as of
last September, has increased the value of the Halliburton CEO's
stock by $78 million.
We are patriots. We are deeply concerned. And we demand change,
now.
I want to hear from you. No more lies from Condoleezza Rice
about whether she and President Bush were advised before 9/11 of
the possibility of planes being flown into buildings by
terrorists. No more. No more gross incompetence in the office of
the Secretary of Defense. No more torture of human beings. No
more disregard of the basic human rights enshrined in the Geneva
Convention. No more kidnapping of people and sending them off to
secret prisons in nations where they will be tortured. No more
unconstitutional wiretapping of Americans. No more proposed
amendments to the United States Constitution that would, for the
first time in our nation's history, limit fundamental rights and
liberties for entire classes of people simply on the basis of
sexual orientation. No more federal land giveaways to
developers. No more increases in mercury emissions from old,
dirty, dangerous coalburning power plants. No more backroom
deals that deprive protection for millions of acres of wild
lands in our nation. No more attacks on immigrants who work so
hard to build better lives in this nation. No more inaction by
Congress on fixing our hypocritical and inconsistent immigration
laws and practices. No more reliance on fiction rather than the
science of global warming. No more manipulation of our media
with false propaganda. No more disastrous cuts in funding for
those most in need. No more federal cuts in community policing
and local law enforcement grant programs for our cities. No more
inaction on stopping the tragic genocide in the Darfur region of
Sudan. No more of the Patriot Act. No more killing. No more
supposedly pre-emptive wars. No more contempt for our long-time
allies around the world. No more dependence on foreign oil. No
more failure to impose increased fuel efficiency standards for
automobiles manufactured in this country. No more energy
policies developed in secret meetings between Dick Cheney and
his energy company cronies. No more excuses for failing to
aggressively cut global warming pollutant emissions. No more
tragically incompetent federal responses to natural disasters
like Hurricane Katrina. No more tax cuts for the wealthiest,
while the middle class and those who are
economically-disadvantaged continue to struggle more and more
each year. No more reckless spending and massive tax cuts,
resulting in historic deficits and historic accumulated national
debt. No more purchasing of elections by the wealthiest
corporations and individuals in our country. No more phony,
ineffective, inhumane so-called war on drugs. No more failure to
pass an increase in the minimum wage. No more silence by the
American people. I we can do this in Salt Lake City, we can do
this throughout the entire country, and the world is going to
hear us.
This is a new day. We will not be silent. We will continue to
raise our voices. We will bring others with us. We will grow and
grow, regardless of political party — unified in our insistence
upon the truth, upon peace-making, upon more humane treatment of
our brothers and sisters around the world.
We will be ever cognizant of our moral responsibility to speak
up in the face of wrongdoing, and to work as we can for a
better, safer, more just community, nation, and world.
So we won't let down. We won't be quiet. We will continue to
resist the lies, the deception, the outrages of the Bush
administration and this complacent, complicit, go-along
Congress. We will insist that peace be pursued, and that, as a
nation, we help those in need. We must break the cycle of
hatred, of intolerance, of exploitation. We must pursue peace as
vigorously as the Bush administration has pursued war. It's up
to every single one of us to do our part.
Thank you everyone for lending your voices to this call for
compassion, for peace, for greater humanity. Let us keep in mind
the injunction of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.: "Our lives begin
to end the day we become silent about things that matter."
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