Happy Oil
Dependence
Day
By Robert
Scheer
02/07/08 "Truthdig"
-- - As
we head into
the Fourth
of July
weekend of
patriotic
bluster and
beer
swilling —
but before
we are too
besotted
with
ourselves —
might we
also for
once
consider our
imperfections?
Why not take
a moment to
heed the
cautions of
our founding
father,
George
Washington,
whose true
legacy will
most likely
be ignored
during the
flag-waving
weekend?
Washington’s
“Farewell
Address” to
the new
nation was a
warning
about the
threat of
American
imperial
ambitions
and a
declaration
of his high
expectations
for a
republic of
free men:
“In offering
to you, my
countrymen,
these
counsels of
an old and
affectionate
friend, I
dare not
hope they
will make
the strong
and lasting
impression I
could wish;
that they
will control
the usual
current of
the
passions, or
prevent our
nation from
running the
course which
has hitherto
marked the
destiny of
nations.
But, if I
may even
flatter
myself, that
they may be
productive
of some
partial
benefit,
some
occasional
good; that
they may now
and then
recur to
moderate the
fury of
party
spirit, to
warn against
the
mischiefs of
foreign
intrigue, to
guard
against the
impostures
of pretended
patriotism.
…”
We are
drowning in
the
“impostures
of pretended
patriotism,”
used to
cover the
lies that
got us into
Iraq, the
defense of
torture and
the
violation of
our basic
liberties.
In the name
of
patriotism,
we presume a
God-given
American
right to
reorder the
world to our
liking,
masking the
vice of
unfettered
greed as an
obligation
of national
security.
Any doubts
as to this
later
governing
impulse of
our imperial
ambitions
were
shattered
with the
recent news
that U.S.
advisers to
our puppet
government
in the Green
Zone of
occupied
Iraq have
worked out
agreements
for American
oil
companies to
gain control
of Iraqi oil
fields. But,
then again,
what did we
expect when
we elected a
Texas oil
hustler, and
a failed one
at that, to
be our
president?
Only in an
America
dumbed down
by constant
propaganda
about our
innate moral
superiority
will anyone
any longer
believe that
we didn’t
invade Iraq
for the oil,
even though
Secretary of
State
Condoleezza
Rice came to
the Bush
administration
from the
board of
directors at
Chevron,
where they
named an oil
tanker after
her. Like
Vice
President
Dick Cheney
with those
Halliburton
contracts,
Rice has
stayed true
to her
corporate
sponsors.
That’s what
the U.S.
invasion of
Iraq
accomplished;
for the
first time
in more than
three
decades
after Iraq
joined a
worldwide
trend of
formerly
colonized
nations
gaining
control of
their own
resources,
Big Oil is
getting its
black gold
back. It was
always about
the oil —
that’s why
“we” invaded
Iraq — only
“we” aren’t
getting any,
at least not
at a
reasonable
price. The
oil
companies
are.
I know it’s
difficult
for the
corporate
media and
politicians,
both fueled
generously
by energy
money, to
grasp the
distinction,
but we the
people and
they the oil
companies
are not one
and the
same. While
we suffer at
the pump,
they make
record
profits,
which is the
way they
like it.
Don’t think
for a second
that U.S.
oil
companies
are rushing
into Iraq to
expand
production
to help
lower world
oil prices,
thus making
their
investments
less
profitable.
They just
want to be
on the
winning
side, which
is why the
CEO of
Halliburton
relocated
his office
from Texas
to the
United Arab
Emirates,
where I am
certain he
and his
fellow
corporate
expatriates
are able to
happily
celebrate
the Fourth
of July.
So, take
that
American
flag off
your lapel
and replace
it with a
button
bearing the
Exxon or
Chevron
logo. C’mon,
Dick Cheney
and Condi
Rice, be
straight
about what
it is you
are really
pushing
here. ‘Fess
up — it’s
not the good
old USA as
represented
by the
sucker
taxpayers
conned by
your
patriotic
blather. No
sirree, what
you would
have
Americans
paying
homage to is
the majesty
of the big
multinational
corporations
that exploit
American
military
power to
rule the
world.
But
recognize
that you
have shamed
the legacy
of our first
president.
George
Washington,
who
distinguished
the promise
of the new
world from
the
corruptions
of the old
by shunning
imperial
conquest,
said: “Our
commercial
policy
should hold
an equal and
impartial
hand;
neither
seeking nor
granting
exclusive
favors or
preferences;
consulting
the natural
course of
things;
diffusing
and
diversifying
by gentle
means the
streams of
commerce,
but forcing
nothing.”
If Barack
Obama or
John McCain
was to offer
such words
of wisdom
this Fourth
of July, he
would be
vilified as
“weak,” and
that is a
fit measure
of just how
far we have
descended
from the
high hopes
of our first
president.
Robert
Scheer is
the author,
most
recently, of
“The
Pornography
of Power:
How Defense
Hawks
Hijacked
9/11 and
Weakened
America,”
published by
Twelve
Books.
Copyright ©
2008
Truthdig,
L.L.C.
