A Look Back and Ahead In An
Age of Neocon Rule
By Stephen Lendman
12/27/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- Borrowing the opening line from
Dickens' Tale of Two Cities - "It was the best of times,
it was the worst of times...." He referred to the French
Revolution promising "Liberte, egalite and fraternite"
that began in 1789, inspired by ours from 1775 - 1783.
It ended a 1000 years of monarchal rule in France
benefitting those of privilege and established the
nation as a republic the way ours did for us here a few
years earlier.
That was the good news. The bad was the wrong people
came to power. They were the Jacobins who at first were
revolutionary moderates and patriots until they lost
control to extremists like Maximilien Robespierre who
ushered in a "reign of terror" (The Great Terror
sounding a lot like today's "war on terror")
characterized by brutal repression against perceived
enemies from within the Revolution who didn't get a
chance to prove they weren't. In the name of defending
it, individual rights were denied and civil liberties
suspended. Laws were passed that allowed charging those
designated counter-revolutionaries or enemies of the
state with undefined crimes against liberty.
It resulted in justice being meted out to thousands for
what Orwell called "thoughtcrimes" or for their freely
expressed opinions and actions judged hostile to the
state under a system of near-vigilante justice by the
Paris Revolutionary (kangaroo) Tribunal with no right of
appeal. It led to the public spectacle of an inglorious
trip to and quick ending from the death penalty method
of choice of the times - the guillotine that was
barbaric but quick, and a much easier, less painful way
to die for its victims than the use of state-inflicted
torture-murder in the commonly drawn out lethal
injection process used in 37 of the 38 death penalty
states and by the federal government making the
condemned endure a slow agonizing death unable to cry
out while they're being made to suffer during their last
moments of life. Instances of this barbarity aren't
exceptions. They're the rule, the exception being this
time a report or two of what really happens slipped out
and made news.
Fast forward to the past year and the previous five
under George Bush and ask: sound familiar? French
Revolutionary laws during the "reign of terror," like
the Law of Suspects, were earlier versions of our
Patriot I and II and Military Commission Acts today. The
Revolutionary Tribunal, with no chance for justice or
right of appeal, was no different than our military
courts today, and too many civil ones, in which any US
citizen may now be tried anywhere in the world, with no
habeas right of appeal or hope for due process and from
which those sent there won't fare any better than the
French did, doomed to meet their unjust fate - even
though much in these laws today is unconstitutional and
one day will be reversed by a High Court upholding the
law instead of the extremist rogue one now empowered
that scorns it.
What May Lie Ahead As the New Year Approaches
At the end of the sixth horrific year under the reign of
the Bush modern-day extremist Jacobin-neocons, we can
now look ahead, but to what. We have an administration
in charge for another two years one longtime analyst
characterizes as "a bunch of crooks, incompetents and
perverts" with the president's approval rating plunging
as low as 28% in some independent polls and a growing
number of people in the country demanding his
impeachment and removal from office.
It's not likely from the new Democrat-led Congress
arriving in January, as their DLC leadership took it off
the table and so far only promises more of the same
failed policy other than some minor tinkering around the
edges to create an illusion of change no different than
the deceptive kind of course correction proposed by the
Baker "Gang of Ten" Iraq Study Group
(ISG) that guarantees none at all. It doesn't leave
members of the body politic with much hope for the new
year that will likely just deliver more of the same
rogue leadership and policy engendering growing public
discontent and anger but not at a level so far to scare
the those in power enough to want to address it.
The heart of the problem is the unpopular illegal war of
aggression in Iraq, the cesspool of corruption and scorn
for the law in Washington, and the assault on human
rights and civil liberties in the country justified by
the so-called "war on terror" now rebranded a "long war"
against "Islamofascism" and "radicals and extremists"
(who happen to be Muslims.) It's the same failed policy
using the kind of deliberately provocative language
intended to deceive the public to think a threat great
enough exists to justify any state action in the name of
national security including waging wars of aggression
and all the horrors associated with them at home and
abroad.
After the Baker "bob and weave,'' the now you see a
change of course and now you don't, disingenuously
suggesting a drawdown and exit strategy, the New York
Times on December 16 reports "Military planners and
White House budget analysts have been asked to provide
President Bush with options for increasing American
forces in Iraq by 20,000 or more."
The article goes on to say one option is to boost the
force level by up to 50,000 even though any increase
greater than 20 - 30,000 would be "prohibitive" - but it
won't deter the Pentagon, on administration orders, from
extending tours of duty even longer for forces now there
and calling up thousands of reservists and greatly
extended National Guard units to get into this quagmire
even though it's recognized their presence will only
make things worse as well as place an unfair burden on
those called up, who've served before, and their
families.
As of December 27, it's somewhat less clear what Iraq
troop strength policy will emerge in January following
comments by incoming Democrat chairman of the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, Joseph Biden, who just
stated "I totally oppose this surging of additional
American troops into Baghdad. It's contrary to the
overwhelming body of informed opinion, both inside and
outside the administration." Senator Biden will hold
hearings on Iraq on January 9, and at that time things
may heat up a bit at least in rhetoric if not in final
policy.
Additional heat may be created in January after George
Bush admitted for the first time on December 19 that the
US isn't winning the war even though two weeks before
the November mid-term elections he said emphatically
"absolutely, we're winning in Iraq." He wouldn't
acknowledge what most every honest observer knows
including the Pentagon Joint Chiefs - that the wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan are lost. They can't be won and
won't be. No military solution is possible now or any
time ahead.
The president is living in a state of denial, obsessed
with his messianic mission fed him by the vice-president
and hardest of his hard line neocon allies, and it shows
in the outlandish solutions he proposes to an insoluble
problem - send in more troops
(that will only make things worse) and increase the
overall size of the military (that guarantees a
permanent state of war).
It also clearly sounds a lot like the first official
hint from the chief executive that a draft is needed and
will come at some unspecified time ahead - likely
following another "made in Washington" 9/11 calamity
severe enough to get the public to go along with
something now thought intolerable. The president's
sentiment was echoed on December 21 by administration
Veterans Affairs secretary Jim Nicholson who
(incredibly) said that "society would benefit" if the US
reinstated the military draft. He didn't say for whom.
He did go further when asked in a press conference
whether it should include women saying: "I think if we
bring back the draft, there should be no loopholes for
anybody who happens to be drafted." Maybe, to his
thinking, it should include pregnant mothers as well and
single ones with small children.
Such openness by the VA secretary apparently was too
much, too soon, and too clear for the White House that
quickly got the Department of Veterans Affairs to issue
a separate follow-up statement from Nicholson saying:
"Let me be clear, I strongly support the all-volunteer
military and do not support returning to a draft." Let
the reader choose which message to believe, but, with
the nation in a permanent state of war, it looks like
the trial balloon and hint of a draft now being floated
is the opening round to instituting one at some
designated time ahead. That likelihood looms even
greater as the Selective Service System announced it's
planning a comprehensive test of the military draft
machinery, which it hasn't done since 1998 while, at the
same time, saying the agency isn't gearing up for a
draft. But what else would they say as they make plans
to do this on orders from the administration.
It all amounts to an increasing level of insanity from a
power-crazed administration as well as sounding much
like Benjamin Franklin's wisdom who said "The definition
of insanity is doing the same thing over and over
expecting different results." In the case of Iraq, doing
it with more troops on the ground is even more insane as
a greater occupying force there only guarantees a
stronger resistance to it presenting more targets to aim
at with virtually no chance for a peaceful resolution of
the conflict short of a full unconditional withdrawal of
all occupying forces, no strings attached, that won't
happen. In the case of a future draft, now seeming more
likely, it only guarantees this nation plans to stay in
a permanent state of war against future enemies to be
chosen with those in or to be included in the "axis of
evil" heading the target list at some point ahead.
George Bush and others floating these lunatic schemes
have no regard for the lives of those affected, and why
should they. For now, their aim is to buy time, and as
long as they can get away with it, they and their
well-connected cronies and corporate friends stand to
gain from the price everyone else has to pay - a huge
one including the thousands of lives lost each week and
the many more thousands of survivors whose lives will
never be the same again.
Think what it means as the new year approaches. The
nation is at war on two fronts, it's likely more ahead
are contemplated by some in the administration, no
substantive effort is being made to change course, and
the condition at home is a relentless march toward
becoming a full-blown national security police state
we're already perilously close to. It's because the
neocon-dominated Bush administration is reckless in
ambition, out-of-control in policy, and the embodiment
of a relentless and ruthless "weapon of mass
destruction" unleashed on all humanity in its way.
It's underpinned by an extremist ideology based on rule
by savage capitalism that's frighteningly close to and
borders on the tipping edge of the classic definition of
fascism combining corporatism with strong elements of
patriotism and nationalism, a claimed messianic
Almighty-directed and blessed mission, and characterized
by authoritarian rule backed by the iron fist of
militarism and 'homeland security" enforcers, illegally
spying on everyone, and intolerant of dissent and
opposition in an age where the law is what the chief
executive says it is and all semblance of checks and
balances no longer exist. In a word - despotism, but
cloaked in the deceptive rhetoric of a modern democracy
falsely claiming to serve the needs of all its people.
It's also an age of extreme greed and corruption
infesting government and corporate boardrooms with the
gap between rich and poor at levels greater than since
the 19th century "Gilded Age" of the "robber barons."
It's something economist Paul Krugman calls "entirely
unprecedented" under George Bush that "For the first
time in our history, so much (of the nation's economic
growth has gone) to a small, wealthy minority" while the
great majority can't stay even as inflation-adjusted
wages fail to keep up with rising prices and poverty is
growing in an age of affluence affecting tens of
millions in the richest country ever in the world.
The grossness of this disparity was on the online
business pages of the New York Times on Christmas Day in
a story titled "Wall St. Bonuses" So Much Money, Too Few
($250,000) Ferraris. The article highlights that "The
2006 bonus gold rush has re-energized some luxury
markets" like Manhattan real estate that had softened
earlier in the year and echoed the lament of a real
estate broker about a "dearth of listings for two
clients trying to spend $20 million on Manhattan
properties" while mentioning some of the Wall Street
wealthy already in their luxury nests are buying $5
million apartments for their children and private resort
vacation homes to boot.
The same ugly data is there overall worldwide in a newly
released study by the Helsinki-based World Institute for
Development Economics Research of the UN University that
shows the richest 2% of adults in the world own more
than half of its wealth compared, on the other end, with
the assets of about half the world's population
accounting for barely 1% of global wealth - lumps of
coal only for them and a "Ba Humbug" dismissal for their
plight by those with everything wanting still more.
The Cost to a Society Based on Predatory Capitalism and
Out-of-Control Greed, Corruption and Militarism
The societal breakdown in the US is a national disgrace
and affects many millions. A sampling of some of it is
listed below:
-- 47 million Americans can't afford basic health
insurance.
-- Over 80 million in total have no health coverage
during some portion of each year and most of them are
employed.
-- The Bush administration just proposed sweeping cuts
in payments to pharmacies to reduce the Medicaid
benefits 50 million poor in the country rely on, can't
afford to make up the difference for on their own, and
may have to forego medications they vitally need if
pharmacies won't fill prescriptions at lower prices.
-- The US ranks 41st in infant mortality, and the World
Health Organization (WHO) ranks the country 37th in the
world in "overall health performance" and 54th in the
fairness of health care despite spending at a current
level overall of around $2 trillion a year or about
double the amount per capita of the OECD countries that
deliver superior health care overall to their citizens
as a national priority.
-- Well over 12 millions Americans struggle daily to
feed themselves, and many thousands across the country
can't afford housing and are forced to sleep on the
streets including in winter cold.
-- A just released December 14 US Conference of Mayors
report said these conditions continue to worsen based on
a survey of 23 cities showing 7% more requests for food
aid in 2006 following a 12% jump in 2005 during a period
of economic growth.
-- The same report showed requests for shelter rose 9%
in 2006 with requests from families with children rising
5%.
-- Public education is deliberately being eroded with
illiteracy in basic reading, math and computer skills
shamefully high and rising.
-- The US prison population is the highest in the world
at 2.2 million and increasing by 1000 a week, half of
those in it are black, and half of the total prison
population is there for non-violent offenses half of
which are drug-related. The US prison system is a
shameful Gulag and an affront to humanity. The appalling
conviction and sentencing of first-time drug offender
Weldon Angelos is but one of countless examples. He was
convicted of three sales of marijuana in 2004 while in
possession of a gun unrelated to the sale. Under the
insane federal mandatory sentencing laws, he was
sentenced to five years for the first offense and 25
years each for the other two totaling 55 years in
federal prison or a likely life sentence if he's forced
to serve it all because he possessed and sold a few
"joints" of a substance less harmful than legal
cigarettes that kill millions yearly while it's not
known marijuana ever killed anyone using it. Only in
America.
-- The true state of things overall is suppressed by the
dominant corporate-controlled media (including the NPR
and PBS parts of it) functioning as a national
thought-control police controlling all mass
communication and depriving the public of any real
information vital to a healthy democracy and their
welfare.
-- Racial segregation is as great as in the 1960s, and
the national sport almost is demonizing Muslims as
"terrorists, radicals, extremists and Islamofascists"
and impoverished "people the color of the earth"
Mexicans and Latin Americans as "illegal immigrant
invaders polluting" our white western European society
and culture, mindless that they only come el norte in
desperate search of work because of the devastating
effects of NAFTA on their lives that destroyed their
ability to support their families.
Data from the Oakland Institute think tank specializing
in social, economic and environmental issues shows that
heavily subsidized US corn exports to Mexico have
tripled since NAFTA came into force forcing two million
Mexican corn farmers out of business, something that was
predicted in advance but allowed to happen anyway. It
also led to suicides but at a rate nowhere near the
level globalized trade US-style had on farmers in India
where as many as
100,000 of them have taken their own lives because "New
World Order" indebtedness caused them to lose their
farms and then everything else.
-- Childhood poverty in the US ranks 22nd and next to
last among developed nations when there should be
virtually none tolerated in the richest country in the
world or toleration of any of the other listed abuses.
-- An alarming number of high-paying and other jobs have
been exported abroad in a process that's gone on for
decades but picked up in momentum since the 1980s and
especially in recent years. Mckinsey Global Institute
estimates the volume will grow 30 - 40% a year for the
next five years. Forrester Research estimates 3.3
million white-collar jobs will be lost by 2015 with most
affected areas in financial services and information
technology, and University of California researchers
estimate that "up to 14 million American jobs are at
risk to outsourcing."
It adds up to a nation in decline, losing its industrial
base and becoming primarily a service-oriented economy
mainly offering low-skill, low-pay jobs with the better,
higher-paying ones growing scarcer, making a college
degree in areas outside of critical skills almost
worthless. Exporting jobs to low-wage countries is a
boon for corporate bottom lines in an age of "globalized
free trade" never characterized as fair for the harm it
does to millions of wage earners at home or in the
developing countries on the receiving end being
exploited by capital that sucks out their wealth and
impoverishes their people, many of whom work for
near-slave-rate wages in a modern era of serfdom in
countries around the world in Asia, Africa, Eastern
Europe and Latin and Central America.
-- Worker outrage around the world in protest is growing
in response to these abuses (unreported in the US)
because most governments are doing little or nothing to
ameliorate them. It showed up on November
22 in South Korea when over 200,000 workers belonging to
the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU) staged a
general strike protesting in 17 cities against the
bilateral US-Korea Free Trade Agreement currently being
negotiated that will do to their members and farmers
what NAFTA did to Mexicans and India's agricultural
trade policies did to their small farmers. It continued
on the streets in the days following and spilled over to
the Big Sky Ski Resort in Big Sky, Montana where
negotiations are being held in seclusion but are still
unable to escape the daily protests held against them
there.
-- It happened as well in Cebu City, Philippines where
President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo (closely allied to the
failed Bush agenda and elected through fraud) had to
cancel two Association of Southeast Asian Nations
(ASEAN) meetings in December attended by 19 countries
including the US and Canada. It was an abrupt ending to
the meeting held to ratify trade and security agreements
because of the mass protests by workers, farmers and
others against their harmful effects forcing thousands
in the country to leave daily to go abroad for work
paying enough to support their families at home.
-- Workers almost everywhere have been harmed, including
in the US, as union clout and worker rights here have
declined in an age where the social contract government
once had with its working people has been dismantled
with less than 13% of the work force (the lowest in the
industrialized world) unionized today compared to
one-third of it in 1958. In an age of modern-day "robber
barons," the middle class bedrock of a democratic state
is slowly disappearing as the nation moves closer to
becoming a banana republic at a time when 51 of the
world's largest economies are corporate giants, most of
them US-based.
It all goes on with no redress or sign of change in an
age of out-of-control militarism and outlandish budgets
supporting it that began ratcheting up under Ronald
Reagan, along with big budget deficits to pay for it,
and have gone wild under George Bush. The White House
just approved a fiscal year 2008 near $470 billion
Pentagon budget on top of an additional $100+ billion
off-the-books amount minimum more that will boost this
year's war budget for Iraq and Afghanistan to a yearly
record of about $170 billion. It also needs tens of
billions annually for "Homeland Security" and tens of
billions more for the "spy agencies" totaling numbers in
the range of well over $700 billion a year and rising -
while social spending continues to be slashed to pay for
it all in a heartless society scorning its people and
their essential needs as long as the interests of
capital are served along with the militarists in it
profiting from its blood money.
Since WW II, when the US emerged as the only dominant
nation left standing, Washington, instead of disarming
and fostering peace, embarked on a now long-running
program of militarization to maintain the country's
political, economic and military preeminence over all
others. It takes a lot of military spending to do it,
that could have been used far more productively
investing in human capital (like health and education)
and physical capital (like essential infrastructure) as
well as promoting non-military related business and
industry that over time pay back far greater dividends
than the short-term gains from building weapons and
having large standing armies, navies and air forces that
only exist to kill and destroy.
Productive spending also pays off in creating a society
free from a dominant military culture like now exists
out-of-control and hard to contain in the Pentagon that
scorns civil liberties and democratic principles and
values that have nearly vanished. The course this nation
chose 60 years ago led to today's corrupted society
armed to the teeth for endless wars with the most
destructive weapons in human history deployed on over
800 known military bases in about 155 of the 192
countries of the world. It cost an unimaginable amount
creating this monster as documented by the Center for
Defense Information. It reported this country spent an
estimated $21 trillion in constant dollars since 1945 on
defense, the numbers continue to rise sharply, and the
mindset of most of the nation's leaders, especially
George Bush, is when you've got the might, you have to
throw it around to prove it as well as scare off
potential challengers.
Shamefully the US stands as a modern-day Sparta
glorifying war and those put in charge to wage it.
Witness the retirement ceremony for Army Major General
Geoffrey Miller last summer when Army Vice Chief of
Staff General Richard Cody awarded the man who
supervised the infamous US Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib
torture-prisons with the Distinguished Service Medal
(DDSM). This award was established by Richard Nixon in
1970 so the Secretary of Defense could reward officers
of the US Armed Forces "whose exceptional performance of
duty and contributions to national security or defense
have been at the highest levels."
Witness also the December 16 retirement ceremony at the
Pentagon for unindicted war criminal and
torture-authorizer Donald Rumsfeld complete with pomp
and circumstance, George Bush and Dick Cheney in
attendance for the spectacle, and a 19 round cannon
salute that might have been better aimed. In open
defiance of growing public anger over the war, speakers,
including the president, shamelessly lauded Rumsfeld for
the war of aggression he directed and his leadership in
doing it. The galling scene showed Bush hugging Rumsfeld
saying: "This man knows how to lead, and he did. And the
country is better off for it." He failed to say for
whom, but it got worse with Dick Cheney saying: "I
believe the record speaks for itself - Don Rumsfeld is
the finest Secretary of Defense this nation ever had."
Contrast those spectacles with the fate of extraordinary
people like Lynne Stewart prosecuted for her crime of
courage, honor and resisting tyranny. She was unjustly
charged under the 1996 Antiterrorism Act with four
counts of aiding and abetting a terrorist organization
and violating Special Administration Measures (SAMS)
imposed by the US Bureau of Prisons, which included a
gag order on Sheik Abdel Rahman whom she represented as
counsel for the defense in his 1995 trial because former
US Attorney General Ramsey Clark asked her to take the
case.
Lynne took it in the same spirit she spent her entire
30 year professional life as a courageous champion for
the rights of the poor, underprivileged and those in
society never afforded due process unless they're lucky
enough to have an advocate like her. She broke no law,
and her trial was a gross miscarriage of justice. Still,
the Justice Department asked for a harsh 30 year
sentence. It wasn't for any crime committed. It was to
send a clear message to all in the legal community not
to represent "unpopular clients" and not to afford them
their legal right of due process with competent counsel
when the government wants them put away.
Lynne for the present had the last word being vindicated
in court on October 17 when Judge John G. Koeltl
rejected the prosecution's case in the 28 month sentence
he handed down allowing Lynne to remain free pending her
appeal to a higher court, acknowledging it might
overturn her conviction and effectively rebuking the
Justice Department for their prosecution of a courageous
woman who spent a lifetime fighting for justice.
The outcome was painfully different in an age of Muslim
demonization and persecution shown in the prosecution of
Dr. Rafil Dhafir, a Muslim American of Iraqi descent and
practicing oncologist until his license was unjustly
revoked as a prelude to the greater outrage committed
against him. Dr. Dhafir was charged and tried in another
US "kangaroo court" for what Katherine Hughes called and
wrote his "crime of compassion." Katherine followed the
trial daily in court for 17 weeks and remains his
champion, continuing to work tirelessly for his
vindication and release.
Dr. Dhafir was convicted and is now serving a 22 year
sentence in federal prison for violating the Iraqi
Sanctions Regulations (the IEEPA) having used his own
funds and what he could raise from others to bring
desperately needed humanitarian aid, including food and
medical supplies, to Iraqi people unable to get them
because of the punitive, harsh and unjust sanctions
imposed prior to the 2003 war. He did it through his
Help the Needy charity, and for it was convicted of
violating the sanctions, tax fraud, money laundering,
and mail and wire fraud - a total of 60 counts and found
guilty on 59 of them.
The verdict sent another chill through the Muslim
community, and as Katherine explained on her web site -
dhafirtrial.net - "If we can get Rafil Dhafir, we can
get anyone." Not quite, as Lynne Stewart's vindication
proves. But it proves something else too. In the age of
George Bush, the chance of prevailing against injustice
as a white American is a lot better than for a
"not-as-white" Arab Muslim, even an American one,
especially one courageous enough to take on a mission of
mercy in defiance of state policy unjustly prohibiting
it.
Dr. Dhafir was confined at the federal prison in
Fairton, NJ until December when he was transfered
further away from his family, who weren't told. He's now
at what's been described as the hellhole in Terre Haute,
IN, in an area of right wing extremism and KKK
influence, in a deliberate act of further barbaric
vengeance to break his spirit, restrict his access to
legal help and his family, and cause him undue pain and
suffering in an age of US-sanctioned and authorized
torture as a method of social control and inhumanity and
because no dissenting authority has the courage to
challenge Washington's willingness to go against the
most basic principles of equity and justice.
A Look Back to Find Direction Ahead
A look back to an important anniversary just reached
should have been duly noted and reflected on in the
major media, but it passed nearly unnoticed. It was the
December 15 anniversary of the Bill of Rights of
1791 to the Constitution framed in 1787. It gave us
unimaginable freedoms up to that time written into the
law of the land that overall was a great democratic
experiment never tried before outside of ancient Athens
for a few decades before it ended. It gave people the
rights of free expression, religion and peaceable
assembly; protection from illegal searches and seizure;
the right of due process, against double jeopardy and to
remain silent if accused; to a speedy trial by jury if
charged with the right to counsel and to be able to call
witnesses; protection from any cruel and unusual
punishment and more.
Most of the credit for this historic achievement goes to
James Madison who drafted the first 10 amendments and
with his perseverance got the other Framers to go along.
He then managed to get the needed two-thirds vote from
both Houses of Congress and ratification by the required
three-fourths of the states in 1791 to have them become
the law of the land - a major landmark achievement today
being defiled by those in power who have contempt for
the freedoms the Founders gave us.
Madison is thought of by some to be the "Father of the
Constitution," but it's more accurate to call him its
Godfather as he had a lot of help from the other 54
Founders who met in the Philadelphia State House, where
the Declaration of Independence was signed 11 years
earlier, to frame this historic document for the new
republic they hoped would last into "remote futurity" -
if we could keep it as Ben Franklin warned at the time
and would shudder now at how things turned out and
condemn those in power responsible.
Two future presidents, Thomas Jefferson and John Adams
were serving abroad as envoys to France and Britain and
weren't in Philadelphia for this historic gathering.
When they were back later on, Jefferson and Madison
wanted twelve initial amendments to the Constitution
instead of the original 10 that were adopted.
Federalists John Adams and Alexander Hamilton, however,
opposed the Bill of Rights entirely and managed to
exclude from them the other two that included "freedom
from monopolies in commerce," or what are now giant
corporate predators, and "freedom from a permanent
military," or today's standing armies waging wars of
illegal aggression.
Imagine what might have been, what was lost, and how the
country might be governed today had Jefferson and
Madison prevailed. Still they deserve our gratitude for
what they accomplished, and it's disconcerting at the
least to wonder how much worse off we'd be now if they
hadn't gotten any of the Bill of Rights freedoms in our
founding law that although lost under neocon rule may
one day be restored if we can survive in the meantime.
A Look Ahead In An Age of State-Sponsored Terror Under
Neocon Rule
It's time to pause at year's end to give thanks for our
blessings but reflect that the spirit of the season
demands that the madness of Bush neocon rule be stopped
and ended before it's too late. Six years is more than
enough to know the administration's agenda at home and
abroad is roguish, corrupted by greed and contempt for
the law, ruthless in its pursuit of world dominance
through the barrel of a gun, and arrogant enough to
think it can get away with it because who'll challenge
those in charge.
Internally, there no longer are checks and balances as
the three branches of government under Republicans and
Democrats are united for a common purpose, and their
agenda to carry it out is hostile to the public
interest. It's the ultimate expression of Lord Acton's
dictum that "power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts
absolutely." Positively it does in the age of George
Bush and a culture obsessed with power, the lust for
more of it, and the worship of the wealth and privilege
that comes with it. It wreaks of the Vince Lombardi
philosophy that "Winning isn't everything; it's the only
thing," and the only rules are the ones those now in
power make up as they go along justifying whatever they
choose to do, regardless of its consequences always
harmful to the great majority.
It's also based on might making right but not the way
Abe Lincoln meant it when he said in his February,
1860 Cooper Union speech prior to his July presidential
nomination that year: "Let us have faith that right
makes might, and in that faith, let us, to the end, dare
to do our duty as we understand it." He later expressed
a spirit of reconciliation with the South and kind of
humanity George Bush has contempt for in his second
inaugural address in March, 1865 when he spoke of
"malice toward none (and) charity for all" only weeks
before his life was taken by an assassin's bullet.
Imagining that language from George Bush, and meaning
it, would be to imagine the unimaginable from a man who
likely doesn't even understand it.
What is imaginable in the year ahead and thenceforth is
a world without George Bush and his neocon extremist
administration leading the nation on a path to hell.
Those wanting justice demand the Congress act to impeach
him and the vice-president and then remove them from
office allowing for the chance charges will be brought
against them both and others in their administration so
they'll be held to account in the International Criminal
Court (ICC) in the Hague or another judicial venue where
officials may be prosecuted for war crimes, crimes
against humanity and genocide. They committed them all
and more against the people of Iraq, at least two of the
three in Afghanistan, and a legion of others against the
people of the United States and its Constitution.
It'll only happen if it comes from the bottom up, from
enough public outrage bubbling to the surface vocally
demanding justice be served and the rule of law restored
and again respected. No one at any level in public or
private life should ever be allowed to get away with the
kind of reckless and gross criminality that's been
rampant and out-of-control in Washington for the past
six years under Republican neocon rule.
It's long past time to put an end to this criminal class
of rogues in charge, running the country like their
private fiefdom in a culture of galling corruption and
scorn for the law that exceeds anything here ever
preceding their tenure. Already there's a groundswell of
growing outrage slowly building in size and intensity.
As the new year approaches, it remains to be seen if a
combination of those people of conscience can unite with
enough others in the body politic to give us all what
everyone should want and demand - an end to wars, a
renewed respect for the law, accountability for those in
government who violated it, and a commitment to serve
the public interest with equity and equal justice for
all in the true spirit of a real democracy restored from
the grave and once again respected and cherished.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached
at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog
site at
www.sjlendman.blogspot.com.
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