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Holocaust Redux
By Manuel Valenzuela
| “The only thing for evil to triumph is for
good men to do nothing”-- Edmund Burke |
04/25/07 "ICH"
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The State of That Which Is
Such is the state of human affairs, whether in the present age
or in those that came before, that not a decade passes without
humanity resurrecting, in some corner of the globe, in some
forsaken nation, the devastation unleashed by human wickedness.
Whether mass murder, genocide, ethnic cleansing, endemic rape,
pillage, scorched earth and yes, even Holocaust, human
wickedness prevails upon the human condition, leaving us
impotent beasts in its wake, unable to control or suppress its
malevolent tentacles, seemingly powerless to alter or halt its
predictable and disastrous momentum.
The barbarity to which we are predisposed, to which we are
unable to exorcise from our nature, is as common to so-called
primitive peoples, those humanity likes to call “third worlders,”
as it is to those societies considering themselves modern and
developed. There is no difference between suicide bombers and
guided missiles raining down from the sky. Technology does not
behold humanity to label the terrorism falling from the sky as
nobler, or as more moral, than that of terrorism bred through
poverty. Possessing vast wealth and resources does not diminish
murder and criminality, nor the birth of, and continuation in, a
new Holocaust.
The crimes against humanity that are thrust upon the world with
a consistency that betrays our anemic ability to control our
mammalian nature do not discriminate based on race, color,
ethnicity or religion. We are free to unleash wickedness,
whether our powers derive from the machete or the smart-bomb,
the suicide bomber or the guided missile, the knife or the
machine gun, from tribal conflagrations or nation to nation war.
The consistency by which human wickedness is thrust upon our
conscious cannot be denied, nor can it be ignored.
Such is the state of human affairs, and so little progress have
we made in dominating our primitive mammalian behaviors, that
even in the supposed modern world of today, even in the supposed
enlightened nations of the West, the harbingers of mass
destruction and suffering are spawned, planned and executed. For
those bastions of morality and exceptionalism we call the First
World have realized that war is as old as humankind itself, and
as profitable as well, for the violence that creates war is
ingrained into our instincts, embedded into the most violent
species the planet has ever evolved.
War and its multitude of deviations, along with its many
devastating aftereffects, has never been controlled or
sequestered; its extinction has never been a possibility granted
the predisposition to our impotency of willpower. This reality
the lords of war understand well. As long as internal strife
exists inside a nation, as long as racial, ethnic and religious
hatreds are fomented and maintained, and as long as tribes or
peoples or sects or beliefs are allowed to mature into full
blown animosity and anger there will be war.
As long as there exists individuals addicted to power and
wealth, as long as governments and special interests vie for
control of territory and land, as long as natural resources have
immense value and as long as money is valued higher than people
there will be war. As long as there is uneducation, intolerance,
oppression, poverty, injustice, inequality and exploitation
there will be war. As long as there is profit to be derived,
money and power to be made, division to be birthed, resources to
be stolen, there will be war.
As long as there is war, that is to say death, destruction,
suffering and misery, there will also always be crimes against
humanity, for war is the virus that unearths human wickedness
and unleashes crimes against humanity upon each other. Indeed,
if our history books and our anthropological and archeological
studies teach us anything, if they convey any warnings that we
must heed, it is that humankind has possessed a propensity to
destroy one another from the time our first ancestors hung on
trees.
This propensity, this inclination towards violence against
members different than our own group or tribe, is apparent by
observing our closest animal relatives, chimpanzees, with whom
we happen to share 98 percent of our genetic code with, as they
wage violent war-like battles between groups. It is apparent
with every war modern man gives birth to and nurtures through
our indifference and silent acquiescence. It is apparent with
every act of genocide, ethnic cleansing, torture, mass murder,
rape and extermination, in all corners of the globe, regardless
of time and space. From primate cousins to modern man, violence
is a reality, and a curse.
For if this malevolence that possesses us were not ingrained in
our core, in our behaviors and psychologies, if it were not part
of our human condition, would it keep surfacing over and over
again, irrespective of time, distance, space and peoples? If our
propensity to unleash carnage and violence upon each other were
not part of who and what we really are, would such a thing as
human wickedness and destruction and violence even exist? Would
war and violence and devastation upon our fellow human beings?
In fact, they exist because they possess us like a miscreant
demon, living within our nature, controlling our destiny and our
lives, unwilling to escape or be exorcised from our condition,
creating the most violent species to ever roam Earth. War and
genocide and Holocaust exist for the simple fact that we exist,
because war without humans is no war at all, because violence of
man against man cannot exist if there is no man, because humans
are impotent to rid ourselves of that demon called human
wickedness.
Indeed, our species has been defined through war and its
inevitable crimes against humanity. Lingering in our midst for
hundreds of thousands of years, endemic to all civilizations,
tribes and peoples, the human wickedness we seemingly
resuscitate with every new generation is a symptom of our
disease, the very sickness maintaining us from advancing forward
as a species. Just when we believe ourselves enlightened or
reborn, just as we think we have exorcised the demons within,
just as we think a new generation of humans has defeated that
which enslaves us to our passions, released again and reborn
forever is the violence and the destruction and the suffering
and the mass murder and the catastrophe that is war.
Repeating the pattern that has held us hostage from time
immemorial, we believe ourselves enlightened enough to think
that violence and war and crimes against humanity will settle
our differences, instead of increasing our animosity and
hatreds.
We have evolved war, yet war has not evolved us. There is but
one common denominator in the perpetual stream of violence, war
and crimes against humanity we have seen repeated over and over
throughout history – whether it be written or long forgotten –
and that is us, human beings, Homo sapiens. For we remain
prisoners of our own delusions, slaves of our self-proclaimed
exceptionalism, blinded to the true nature of our existence by
the comfortable glow of our most primitive myths.
As long as we maintain our delusions, our purposeful ignorance,
our disastrous belief in fictions and fables, the reality of man
killing man will endure, long into perpetuity, possessing our
nature and our condition, concocting war after war, molding
violence and destruction through the deadly mixture of our
instincts, behaviors and mammalian predispositions. Until we
finally decide to purge the grip of our self-deception, of
thinking ourselves beyond the realm of our reality and truth, of
who and what we really are, and not what we pretend to be,
humankind will linger on in the limbo of self-destruction,
living a fantasy that does not comport with our reality,
granting ourselves small windows of temporary sanity, inevitably
blown to bits by the destructive qualities we chose to ignore
and not confront.
The predictable unleashing of our worst inner demons invariably
destroys all that is achieved during the small frames of sanity
we exhibit. For every step we take forward in our evolution, the
demons called human wickedness takes us ten steps back. This
demon has prevented us from progressing to the full capabilities
of human thought and understanding. In the near future, given
our level of technology and modernity, it might very well be the
catalyst that sends us back to the Stone Age or indeed, buries
us permanently under the rubble of our once-great civilization.
If the pattern continues, so will the trend, and in time, so
will our self destruction, for as John F. Kennedy once said, “If
we do not put an end to war, war will put an end to us.”
Only time and our willingness to alter inevitability stand in
the way of where we are headed. Only humankind can put a stop to
human wickedness. Only we can destroy that which is slowly, but
surely, destroying us all.
Abandonment of Brotherhood
How does one even begin to examine the devastation that Iraq has
become? How does one begin to contemplate what is now, thanks to
America’s illegal and immoral invasion and occupation, an utter
collapse of incomprehensible proportions?
What was once the nation, and the people, of Iraq has been
transformed into an amalgam of carnage, blood, misery and
decimation the likes of which the world has not seen since World
War II, or Vietnam. Iraq has become a human catastrophe, a
defeat for humanity itself, birthed not through tempests or
tsunamis or earthquakes, but through the criminality, corruption
and human wickedness of one nation. It has been humankind that
has routed itself in self-debasement, our failure to act one
more silver chalice in our trophy case of human wickedness.
It boggles the mind to even begin to fathom the suffering and
misery of the Iraqi people, a collection of what was once 25
million human beings, the vast majority living in peace and
apparent happiness, maintaining sectarian harmony, content with
stability and security, living normal lives and cherished
memories. The collapse of their society into chaos and anarchy
has been one of the most spectacular crimes against humanity
ever witnessed. Indeed, hell on Earth has been imported into
Mesopotamia, creating, since the early 1990’s, a Holocaust that
defies logic, reason and common sense, an evil so malevolent, so
egregious, that its devastation will not cease until decades
after Empire’s last throes have returned normalcy to the people
of the planet. What is now seen as a debacle, as a failure, is
nothing more than a malevolent crime of mass murder, rape and
pillage, a crime against humanity itself.
The seeds of Holocaust were planted in the fertile soils of
Mesopotamia, where the Tigris and Euphrates flow, where
humankind was nurtured, feeding off the bosom of rich land and
life-giving water, at the beginning and after the end of the
first Gulf War. It was at this time that the Iraqi people, and
not the government, were chosen to feel the collective
punishment of the rising Empire, a nation so consumed by hubris
and arrogance that, using its vast powers of persuasion and
control, instituted a regime of devastating sanctions, most
targeting the infrastructure, food and medicine necessary for
the general welfare of the populace.
The decision was made in the upper echelons of governance during
the Clinton administration to enact and enforce sanctions that
were always known to harm only average, ordinary citizens, those
that depended on the state for health, food, shelter and
education. This conscious decision was made even knowing that
the Saddam Hussein regime would not suffer as a result of the
sanctions. Indeed, the regime of sanctions was aimed
specifically at the Iraqi people, 25 million innocent human
beings whose only crime was being Iraqi, their homes located
above the enormous fields of the devil’s excrement. The Iraqi
people were about to feel the wrath of the American Empire,
enabler and disseminator of a new Holocaust.
Compounded with the complete destruction by aerial bombing of
Iraq’s electricity, sanitation, sewage, food production, medical
industry and civil infrastructure during the war, all using
radiation-saturated depleted uranium filled missiles, artillery
and shells, a nation once among the healthiest on the planet
began to feel the aftereffects of disease, cancers, stillbirths
and deformities. With little food supplies trickling into the
nation, hundreds of thousands of children and adults began to
suffer malnutrition, hunger and starvation. Soon disease and
malnutrition, easily remedied by adequate supplies of food and
medicine, began to take their terrible and debilitating toll.
This medieval and barbaric blockade, sponsored, enacted,
enforced, defended and maintained by the Empire, began to rob 25
million Iraqis of nutrition, healthcare, education and of the
standard of living that was the envy of the Middle East. Iraq
soon went from having some of the most nourished children and
adults in the world to having one of the most malnourished
populations on the planet. One of the best standards of living
in the Middle East was transformed into a cesspool of
backwardness, a rotting and eroding society robbed of strength
and vitality. Without adequate medicines, supplies and machines,
their importation into Iraq being prevented by America, children
began to die by the thousands every month.
Children became weak and anemic, their bodies and bellies
turning to symbols of malnutrition. Immune systems were
weakened, collapsing the body’s ability to fight disease, toxins
and viruses. Those once healthy and strong now succumbed to
easily preventable diseases and viruses, losing once vibrant
energy, losing the will to live. Those once bright and
intelligent had their development halted, for food and the
energy needed to sustain growth dwindled. Children began to die
in an epidemic of economic genocide, enacted and enforced by the
American Empire, as always tightening the noose on the sanctions
regime, as always caring nothing for the plight of millions of
Iraqis. An entire generation of Iraqi children had perished,
vanished from the Earth, never more able to play and dream and
grow up, never able to experience the life we all strive to
have.
After a decade of sanctions, up to one million Iraqi children
had died, with 500,000 adults buried in graves as well, the
products of easily preventable disease, the products of a nation
not being allowed to have medicine, supplies and the necessary
machines that can save lives. Close to 5,000 children were dying
every month, to say nothing of those whose brain and body
development became stagnant due to malnutrition. By the
beginning of the 21st century, the American Empire had caused
the death of 1.5 million Iraqis, spirits like you and I, never
to take a breath of air or a gulp of water, never having the
opportunity to grow old and enjoy the wonders of life, perishing
in a war upon the Iraqi people they were impotent to wage war
against.
The seeds of Empire had been planted, cast upon soils of
genocide, watered with the blood of dead Iraqi children, winds
of devastating silence spreading disease and viruses and cancer
and mutations to all corners of Mesopotamia, affecting rich and
poor, Shiite and Sunni, its invisible wickedness scattering
itself into young and old, indiscriminately securing new victims
through the inhalation of oxygen.
By the time new Pearl Harbors had been concocted by the Empire,
by the time towers were demolished and the American people
became the obedient warmongers of those cheerleaders pretending
to be leaders, by the time Iraq had been chosen for destruction,
invasion and occupation, up to two million Iraqis had died at
the hand of the Evil Empire, victims of sanctions, a genocide in
itself, a Holocaust by any definition, though only a precursor
to what was yet to come.
The devastation of the invasion and subsequent occupation of
Iraq has brought unfathomable levels of misery and suffering to
the Iraqi people. The utter debacle that is Iraq, many would say
the greatest strategic disaster in American foreign policy, has
become a monument to human wickedness, yet at the same time it
represents one of the most egregious criminal enterprises in the
history of humankind.
For what transpires today, and what has transpired for the last
four years, cannot be labeled as a mistake, or a lie, or a
quagmire. What it is, indeed, what it has always been, is a
crime against humanity, war crimes of the highest order, a
conspiracy that has led to the collapse of Iraq as a state and
to a creation of a Holocaust that will in the end, years from
today – when combined with the economic genocide of the 1990’s,
endemic disease and the radiation poisoning that will kill for
decades to come – have cost the lives of anywhere from four to
six million human beings, to say nothing of the refugee crisis,
the mass displacement of people, ethnic cleansing, the loss of
property, collapse of society, of lives altered, nation
shattered and child development damaged.
The Iraq War represents humanity at its worst, with the elite of
the Empire destroying a nation as an excuse to rebuild it,
caring nothing for dark skinned Arabs, yet claiming contracts in
the billions of dollars, as always designed to pillage the
American treasury and rob the people. Meanwhile, the American
masses have and continue to sit silently in lazy obedience and
acquiescence while war crimes and crimes against humanity are
committed in our name. Like the Good Germans of World War II,
millions of Americans will one day claim they had no idea what
was being done in Iraq, all the while knowing that comfort and
gluttony helped maintain silence and willful ignorance to one of
the worst cases of human wickedness ever to rise from the
violent nature of humankind. To millions of Americans, the
latest gossip from tele-trash and infotainment has more value
than a Holocaust presently being waged by our government.
Where humanity once rose and was nurtured today only Holocaust,
torture, mass detentions, mass rapes, genocide, ethnic
cleansing, radiation poisoning, stunted development,
miscarriages, hatred and dehumanization can be seen, as clear as
sunlight, penetrating deep into the dark recesses of our
conscious, wanting to stop blood from flowing and body parts
from exploding, yet impotent and unwilling to put a halt to a
nightmare Iraqis live on a daily basis and Americans only read
about.
To be living in Iraq today is to live in constant and perpetual
fear, unable to walk once tranquil streets, unable to shop in
comfort, as always grazing bullets and bombs, unsure where
explosions will go off next, afraid to be caught between warring
factions. It is to experience an insecurity and a fear no
American has ever felt inside our shores, of chaos, anarchy, of
civil war where to be one religious sect and not another could
cost you your life, and that of your family. To live in Iraq is
to be subjected to daily car bombs and suicide bombers exploding
in markets and streets, of having bullets whizzing by your head,
of shrapnel attacking your every pore. It is to breathe the
smell of death in every street corner, of feeling the
concussions of bombs reverberating inside your home, and head.
To live in Iraq is to be unsure whether you will make it through
the end of the day, if you will see another sunrise, another
sunset. It is to see 70 percent of your children exhibiting
symptoms of acute stress and traumatic disorders, not being able
to sleep at night because the nightmare of what they have seen,
smelled and heard cannot be exorcised from their minds. It is to
see your child become a constant bed wetter due to the fear and
insecurity that roams her mind. It is to see your son unable to
comprehend the endemic death and bodies he sees trying to get to
school. It is to witness as your child can no longer learn what
she is taught, nor understand her schooling, as the fear and
stress of living in civil war has become too much to bear. To
live in Iraq is to realize that there are now 900,000 children
who are orphans, their parents dead from a war that makes no
sense, their tiny minds forced to confront the reality of being
alone. It is to experience death firsthand, in large numbers, as
no family left in Iraq has gone unharmed, without a murder of a
relative.
To be Iraqi today is to see the most horrible deformities in
young children, many mutated unlike anything seen before, a
product of the invisible ghost of death afflicting expectant
mothers, its radiation penetrating a body’s pores and
bloodstream, traveling into placentas and embryos. To be Iraqi
is to see cancer become an endemic reality, over the last
fifteen years growing exponentially and methodically, inevitably
claiming its victims with the tumors and infections caused by
depleted uranium, becoming a silent killer that will last
centuries, quite possibly altering the genetic code of your
fellow citizens.
To be an Iraqi today is to realize that the professional class
has left the country, becoming refugees in Syria or Jordan, a
number two million strong, while one million more have become
displaced within their own nation, ethnically cleansed by
religious sects, forced to leave their homes, possessions and
neighborhoods, forced to abandon both hope and lives once worth
living. To remain living inside Iraq is to witness criminals
control the streets and militias transforming entire
neighborhoods and districts. To remain in Iraq is to live
without doctors or medical providers, knowing that it has become
too dangerous for them to stay. It is to see professors
assassinated on a daily basis, many now having fled along with
architects, teachers, engineers and state officials. To remain
in Iraq is to see the shortage of professionals, to see that
only the poor and those that do not have the money to flee
remain, trapped in hell on Earth, in a land a devastation, of
Holocaust.
The state of Iraq has now lost 1,000,000 citizens since the
beginning of America’s war of arrogant ignorance began. In four
years, one million human beings have died, an average of 250,000
every year, nearly 70 people every day. Combined with the two
million people who have died as a result of sanctions, it can be
stated that 3 million Iraqis have died since the early 1990’s.
The carnage has only intensified, with bombings routinely
killing 200 Iraqis one day and 150 more another day.
Assassinations of military age men has become routine, found in
the morning haze, bullet holes in the back of their heads,
victims of America’s counter-insurgency, El Salvador-style
tactics. Over 20,000 men, most of them innocent civilians, now
saturate America’s vast gulag system in Iraq, held captive
without due process, existing in limbo and uncertainty, in
essence kidnapped from their homes or from the street, victims
of American dehumanization and ignorance of culture. How many of
these men have been or are tortured in places such as Abu Ghraib?
How many have died while in custody, made to disappear, forever
lost in some remote mass grave?
To be in Iraq is to be living in hell on Earth, a place so
devastating, so horrific, that it has become the rule, not the
exception, to see feral dogs eating from dead corpses. It is to
see football fields become mass graveyards, mosques become
mortuaries, and how missiles and artillery destroy homes and
businesses, turning lives into rubble. It is to experience the
rape of your daughter, the mental retardation of your son, the
humiliation of your family, the invasion into your home by
American forces, the dehumanization of American boots stomping
your face, placing a dark hood over your head, taking your
clothes off, calling you humiliating words, treating you like an
animal.
Living in Iraq is to survive day to day, roaming city streets
ducking bombs and bullets, possessing little money for food,
lost in a sea of fear and uncertainty, unable to find
employment, having two to four hours of electricity, an
unworkable sewage and garbage collection system, having to spend
up to three days waiting in line in order to fill your vehicle
with gasoline. It is to have the smell of death permeate your
every pore every single day, the smell of bombs and smoke and
bullets becoming constant reminders of your closeness with
death. It is to wonder if luck and fate will decide a car bomb
will blow you to bits when you walk to the market, or whether a
sniper will cause your head to explode like a watermelon. It is
to fear an American contractor or soldier will decide your
vehicle should be machine-gunned for fun and games, because it
is cool to destroy the lives of enemies that are not considered
human, and whether your son and father have had enough of the
occupation and humiliation and will inevitably join the
resistance.
To be Iraqi is to wonder if the world has forgotten your plight,
if it even cares about the fate of millions of your fellow
citizens. To live in Iraq is to see the worst in the human
condition, to see human wickedness stamped with the seal of the
United States. It is to believe life has abandoned you,
wondering what you and your people have done to deserve
America’s wrath and punishment. It is to wish for the nightmare
to end, to wake up to normalcy, to security and peace, just how
it was before, when Iraq was a model for the Middle East and the
Arab world. You want to open your eyes and hope the last two
decades have been but an illusion, a hallucination that does not
really exist.
Perhaps you feel hope has been lost, that wickedness has
triumphed, that Iraq will never be the same, that she is no
more, that the land of fertile soils and running water has
ceased to be a viable society. You think the occupation will
never end, that America will be your master until the last drop
of oil is exhausted, that the nightmare you have lived will only
dissipate when the Empire is defeated by the resistance, or by
its own over-extension and ignorance. You see a one-hundred acre
fortress being built, larger even than the Vatican, the largest
embassy the world has ever seen quickly rising from Iraqi
ground, and you know the Empire will never leave. You see
permanent military bases sprouting up alongside petroleum
pipelines and you notice the pillage of your land’s oil through
laws enacted by the Empire’s puppets and you weep for a nation
destroyed from within, damned by the devil’s excrement, cursed
by Western powers who for a century have only cared for the
black gold lying below your feet.
Most importantly, perhaps, you wonder where the voice of the
world has gone, in her uncomfortable silence, in her complete
stillness, why she does not heed your calls for help, why she
fails to stop the carnage and the destruction, why she has
turned a blind eye to you and your people. You look to the
heavens and ask why even in Iraq’s despair and suffering the
world’s people have abandoned millions of her children to the
greed and hubris of the rapacious Pax Americana. You ask fate
why the American people have done nothing to stop this new
Holocaust from continuing, why they casually ignore the plight
of Iraqis, why they continue their blissful ignorance of
reality. You ask why the death of millions of Iraqis is hardly
mourned, why the maiming and psychological devastation of her
children is ignored, why her implosion as a state and as a
people is hidden from the beautiful minds of Americans.
In the end, you ask yourself how a nation that mourns the tragic
loss of thirty-two college students, with wall to wall media
coverage, with flags flying at half staff nationwide, with
services held from coast to coast, rarely, if ever, cares to
even blink at the death and horrible misery of millions of
Iraqis, or offer the same mourning, memorials and media coverage
to the death, and memory, of nearly 3,500 of its sons and
daughters. You ask how it is not understood by the people of the
world that Iraq loses in one month what America lost in one day,
on September 11, 2001, when 3,000 innocent victims of state
terrorism and psychological war were murdered.
Holocaust Redux
It is reality, not hyperbole, to describe what is presently
happening in Iraq as a new Holocaust, a new paradigm of
devastation and destruction, of mass murder and horrific
suffering. An entire nation has been made to implode, an entire
society has been disemboweled, its vital organs gutted and
spilled into hell on Earth. The blood of one million Iraqis
covers her streets, the severed body parts of the maimed pile up
on her corners, and the severed psychology of her youth lies in
tatters. Iraq’s entire society is in disarray, her upper and
middle classes having fled her bosom, living the life of
refugees, her poor and working classes trapped in an inferno
from which escape is but a wishful dream.
Disease and radiation poisoning, those silent assassins that
kill and murder in clandestine pleasure, those unleashed poisons
imported by the Empire, have and will continue to cause the
deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iraq’s poorest and weakest
individuals. For like the gas chambers of yesteryear, radiation
poisoning from depleted uranium, along with the Empire’s
destruction of sanitation, sewer and civil infrastructure, will,
in the end, kill countless and as yet untold numbers of Iraqis,
most forced to suffer sickness and cancer, deformity and
miscarriage, misery and death.
For a Holocaust does not need toxic chambers to count its dead,
nor crematoriums to hide its victims. It does not depend on
concentration camps to starve its prisoners, nor barbed wire to
hide the truth. Deadly poison can be released into the air,
penetrating soil, crops, water and food, slowly penetrating
human bodies, killing from within. It can be created by the
destruction of the infrastructure needed to contain and fight
off infection, disease and outbreaks. Holocaust exists in
sanctions that refuse to let in vital medicines and food, it
exists in making the Iraqi nation itself into an enormous
concentration camp. Holocaust can be flamed by the dropping of
bombs, missiles or artillery into homes and neighborhoods.
Holocaust can be created, molded and furthered by causing civil
war among religious sects, using counter-insurgency machinations
to divide and conquer, caring nothing for the plight of millions
caught in the crosshairs of a societal collapse engineered by
the Empire’s war architects. In the end, the result is the same,
whether a Holocaust is molded by Nazis or nurtured by the Empire
itself. The only reality that changes is the method to the
madness and the cast of characters for whom the flame of
humanity has long since ceased to exist.
What the world is seeing today, for those few who care to see
and disturb their beautiful minds, is a carnage and a
devastation that fits the pattern of Holocaust throughout
humankind’s brief reign on the planet. The Iraq Holocaust, while
still not apparent to all, while still hidden from the conscious
of the world, while still taking place even today, is but
another manifestation of a pattern that is all too familiar to
the human condition.
For no ethnic minority or religious group can claim a monopoly
on Holocaust, no matter how convenient it has become, no matter
how beneficial its incantation and remembrance may be. Holocaust
is an all-inclusive devastation, a human wickedness that preys
upon all peoples, throughout all time and space, whether they be
from 20th century Armenia, Korea, Manchuria, Vietnam, Cambodia,
Philippines, Uganda, Congo, Rwanda, Sudan, Mao’s China, Stalin’s
Soviet Union, Yugoslavia or World War II’s wickedness, which
killed tens of millions in Russia and more than a dozen in
Germany and Eastern Europe. The term Holocaust is not exclusive
to any one particular group, nor can its use be defined by
Empire's propagandists or by history’s victors.
Of course the Empire will never call what is happening in Iraq a
Holocaust, for to do so would criminalize the very enterprise of
destroying a nation and its people for the purpose of
controlling its vast oil fields. To call the Iraq Holocaust by
its rightful name would be to make war criminals of its
architects, its boosters, its propagandists, its stenographers
and its military leaders. It would be to place the Empire on par
with some of the worst atrocities of the vanquished Nazi regime,
creating comparisons between warmongers and leaders of different
eras. To call what is happening in Iraq by its proper term would
be to make tens of millions of American citizens the equivalent
of yesterday’s good Germans. To allow the use of the term
Holocaust to describe present day Iraq, America would risk the
shame and scorn of the people of the world, becoming a pariah
nation, a rogue state, and a failed people.
The Empire will never allow the term Holocaust to be used
alongside the reality, and devastation, of Iraq. The truth of
what has been done and continues to be unleashed upon Iraqis
will, as always, be whitewashed and made to be hidden in a dark,
dank recess of history’s uncomfortable dirty little secrets. In
time, even though the magnitude of what transpired in Iraq will
become known to some, its truth will be suppressed, its reality
contorted, its victims soon forgotten. Just as three to four
million dead Vietnamese were erased from uncomfortable memories,
just as that Holocaust was a reality that never took place, so
too will the Iraq Holocaust dissipate from our conscious, to be
replaced by the dumbed-down heroin of tele-trash, the addiction
of infotainment, usurped by the only Holocaust that ever took
place, the only one that matters, the only mass murder that must
remain ingrained in our memories, never allowed to be replaced,
never allowed to be forgotten.
Yet to the Iraqi people, to those that will invariably survive
the catastrophe that has been imported to their land, the Iraqi
Holocaust will remain an all too real calamity, a truth that
exists in rubble, in mass graves, in the memory of lost souls
and never forgotten memories. To these human beings, the
millions that have already died, along with the millions that
have yet to perish, will never be forgotten, becoming a reality
ignored by the world, yet remaining entrenched like a small
flame inside the hearts of survivors. Every deformity or
mutation of Iraqi babies will remind survivors of the poisons
unleashed by the Empire. Every death caused by malignant cancer
and disease will bring back memories of dropped bombs and
devastating guided missiles. Every scar, burn and amputated limb
will forever become a horrific and eternal memory and reminder
that cannot be erased from one’s brain, their grotesque
appearance becoming a time machine of suffering and misery.
Seared in their minds for decades and centuries to come, the
Iraq Holocaust and its creator will never be forgotten, to be
passed down to each new child born, to each new generation.
In time the present collapse and corruption of humanity, the
present entanglement of human wickedness, this thing called
Holocaust, which we as a species always vow to never again
repeat, will predictably be replaced by another such tragedy. In
time that new horror will itself be replaced by yet another. The
cycle of violence will continue, just as it has always been,
just as it will always be, for its viciousness has never been
stopped, its demons have never been controlled. We are slaves to
its demands, mere weaklings to its call to arms. Impotent we
have been from the very beginning, from the genesis of
humankind, passing enlightenments, reformations, renaissance and
modernity, and still today it cannot be defeated, still we have
failed to free ourselves from its omnipotent grip. Every century
that passes we fall prey to its temptations and its cruelty, its
brief rewards and long-term curse.
Today, in every corner of the globe, in every continent where
man exists the genesis of the next Holocaust is being birthed.
Somewhere, someplace, the next Hitler or Stalin or Mao or Pol
Pot or Bush is being nurtured by hate or anger, feeding off the
breast of intolerance and ideology, living among corruption of
morality, breeding in the self a taste for psychotic narcissism.
For it is a given that wherever man settles in, death,
destruction, extermination and devastation soon follows. It is
written in our history books, in stone tablets, in our cultures
and ruined cities. Its warnings and lessons are everywhere, if
only we wished to look. It is wired into our human condition. It
remains a virus afflicting our conscious, never exorcised,
always resurrected.
Somewhere, someplace, a leader is being molded among men, as
always infected in delusion, infested with selfishness, though
possessing the qualities of attraction, of leadership, of
hypnotizing thousands through stare and voice. It is this human
being, like so many that have come before, that will recruit a
group of like minded individuals, each, like him, with an
insatiable thirst for power, immoral in character, criminal in
personality, in time concocting power grabs and debasement of
the human condition.
It is from these so-called leaders of men, these alpha males,
from where human wickedness derives, flowing from its oasis of
hate, through rivers of unending blood and carnage. For mostly,
throughout time, it is the warmongers, the war-like leaders that
create the devastation and destruction called Holocaust. It is
from war-like leaders that war-like people are created. It is
from them where human wickedness derives, passing from person to
person like a virus, making monsters of us all.
Such is the state of human affairs that one Holocaust will give
rise to another, and another after that, filling a century of
civilization with systematic death and murder. Its consistency
is overwhelming, clear as day to see, for those willing to
confront uncomfortable realities. For every step forward we
take, our self-destructive ways push us back ten, committing us
to the primitiveness that has yet to be surpassed and the
mammalian behaviors we have yet to understand. The human
wickedness will continue until we reach an enlightenment of who
and what we truly are, escaping the machinations and
institutions that spawn hatred, injustice, inequality, anger,
division, bigotry, animosity, oppression, ignorance and poverty.
From where will the next Holocaust be born, ruining land and
people, corrupting humankind ever more? When will humanity say
enough is enough, never again, and actually mean it? Will it be
when we put an end to war and human wickedness, or when war and
human wickedness put an end to us? In the meantime, the seeds of
the next act of human devastation are today being planted.
Where, we wonder, will this wicked weed grow next? For where can
be anywhere, and anywhere can be gone tomorrow.
In Iraq we find the answer, for its shows where we have been,
where we at present are and where we will again, and inevitably,
soon be.
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