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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch

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To: SOROS who started this subject3/18/2003 10:47:59 AM
From: portage  Read Replies (3) of 89467
 
Lying.

wstera, cut the self righteous crap.

People in power lie, and their lies do damage. Including, and I would say especially, those in the party that you seem to favor.

fff.org

The Rot at the Center of the Empire
by Jacob G. Hornberger, March 14, 2003

Last weekend’s announcement that the U.S. government had relied on
fake and false evidence in the attempt to secure approval of its upcoming invasion of
Iraq was, by and large, met by a collective yawn from the American people,
especially the members of Congress. It’s just one more example of the depths of
moral depravity to which our nation has fallen.

Think about: After months of enumerating a long laundry list of alternating
justifications for invading Iraq and killing lots of people and after looking for every
conceivable technical violation of UN resolutions to justify an invasion, it now turns
out that the federal government has cited and relied on fake and false evidence to
persuade both the American people and the UN Security Council that an invasion is
necessary — an invasion that will certainly kill tens of thousands of Iraqis, including
both ordinary soldiers and civilians, and possibly large numbers of American GIs.

Of course, federal officials are playing the innocent. One U.S. official says, “We fell
for it.” Yeah, sure! The most advanced intelligence service in the history of the world
fell for what UN inspectors were able to ascertain were faked and forged
documents.

Of course, given the administration’s almost desperate attempt to find a “smoking
gun” that will convince people to support the killing of tens of thousands more
innocent Iraqi people in order to effect a “regime change” in Iraq, one possibility is
that U.S. officials simply didn’t look too hard or too closely at the fake evidence
before citing it as another excuse to invade Iraq.

For its part, the FBI is now considering “the possibility that a foreign government is
using a deception campaign to foster support for military action.”

Oh? Foreign governments do that sort of thing? Only foreign governments?

Another possibility, of course, is that agents of the U.S. government knowingly,
intentionally, and deliberately manufactured the fake and false evidence.
Uncompromising defenders of the federal government would say, “The federal
government, unlike foreign regimes, should be presumed innocent of any wrongdoing
until proven guilty. Anyone can make a mistake. I’m sure that that’s what happened
here. Surely the U.S. government would never knowingly, intentionally, and
deliberately manufacture fake and fraudulent evidence on which an important issue
such as war might turn, especially a war that was being
planned by the neo-cons as far back as 1998”.

Oh? The federal government doesn’t engage in such misconduct? Puhleeze, give me
a break! At the risk of employing a French term (which I assume Congress has still
not made illegal), “Au contraire!”

After all, didn’t the feds knowingly, intentionally, and deliberately obstruct justice in
an official federal court proceeding in which they were desperately attempting to
convict Randy Weaver, an innocent man? Didn’t they perjure themselves and hide
and destroy official documents in that federal proceeding with the specific hope and
intent that the jury would convict Weaver? Didn’t they lie about using incendiary
devices at Waco?

And if they would do that against Randy Weaver or the Branch Davidians, why
shouldn’t we assume that they would do it against Saddam Hussein? Aren’t the
political stakes much higher in the case of Iraq than they were in the cases of Ruby
Ridge and Waco?

In the 1960s, my father was the U.S. magistrate in my hometown of Laredo, Texas,
which was one of the major ports of entry from Mexico. Whenever the feds arrested
someone, they would bring him to the U.S. magistrate for a preliminary hearing and
the setting of bail. After the suspect was indicted, he would appear before a U.S.
district judge for arraignment and trial.

At the international bridge, everyone entering the United States was subject to a
complete search by U.S. Customs officials. In the 1960s, many long-haired, anti-war
hippies were being arrested at the bridge for possession of marijuana.

My father related to me that one day the U.S. district judge (who ordinarily was
considered very pro-government) called him into his office and said, “Jack, I’m
becoming increasingly concerned about the dropsie cases.” What he was referring to
was the increasing practice of U.S. officials to “drop” some marijuana into the cars of
long-haired, anti-war hippies who they “knew” were guilty of smoking dope at some
time in their life.

The reason for the federal judge’s concern was that he knew that average
Americans, virtually all of whom had attended public schools, would never believe
that their federal officials would engage in such misconduct or that they would ever
lie, especially after having sworn to uphold and defend the Constitution and
especially after swearing to tell the truth with their hand placed on a Bible. The
federal agents knew that in a swearing match between a Customs agent in a federal
uniform and crew cut and a long-haired, anti-war hippie, the jury would always
assume that it was the federal agent who was telling the truth.

Both the federal judge and the U.S. magistrate knew differently. They knew that
when federal officials are out to get someone they feel is deserving of punishment,
they oftentimes stop at nothing to secure his punishment, including lying, committing
perjury, falsifying documents, and obstructing justice.

Recall the matter of Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers. Ellsberg was a high
official in the Pentagon and the Rand Corporation, which did studies for the
Pentagon, during the Vietnam War. He discovered a secret internal Pentagon history
of America’s involvement in the Vietnam War that detailed the many lies that had
been told to the American people — lies that had been used as the justification for
sending tens of thousands of American GIs to their deaths, not to mention the
hundreds of thousands of Vietnamese who were being killed.

One of the biggest lies concerned the false and fake report of the North Vietnamese
“attack” at the Gulf of Tonkin, which was used as the means to circumvent the
constitutional requirement of a congressional declaration of war before the president
can wage war.

Ellsberg secretly copied the documents and released them to the New York Times.
Desperately attempting to protect its lies, the federal government immediately
secured an injunction against the publication of the Pentagon Papers. Even worse,
they actually indicted Ellsberg for treason and, perhaps worst of all, they broke into
his psychiatrist’s office in the hope of finding evidence to destroy him in the public
eye.

Fortunately, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of the publication of the
documents and a federal judge dismissed the charges against Ellsberg on the basis of
the government’s misconduct. When the truth was revealed, the American people
were finally able to force their government, including the Pentagon, to withdraw all
U.S. forces from Vietnam.

It is impossible to estimate how many lives were saved by the courage of Daniel
Ellsberg. It is impossible to estimate how many more lives would have been lost by
the rot at the core of the American empire, a rot that protects lies, obstruction of
justice, and other such wrongdoing.

Unfortunately, every time federal wrongdoing emanating from the rot is exposed,
many Americans seem to take it with a grain of salt. They brush the disclosure aside,
almost as if they would have preferred never learning about it. The attitude seems to
be: Do whatever you think needs to be done, but just don’t tell me about it because I
don’t want to be responsible for the moral consequences.

Thus, when Americans learned that the feds had subjected African Americans to
syphilis experiments, their reaction was predictable: “This is terrible. We just have to
make sure it never happens again.” It was the same when they learned that the feds
had subjected Americans to radiation, chemical, and biological experiments.

It was the same after the feds gassed their own people at Waco. It was the same
after the feds killed Randy Weaver’s wife and young son at Ruby Ridge and then
engaged in their deliberate pattern of perjury and obstruction of justice in their
attempt to wrongfully convict Weaver, whom the jury ultimately adjudged not guilty
of the serious crimes that the feds had accused him of.

Or consider that American jurors will quickly and without thinking convict an
American businessman of paying bribes to foreign officials to circumvent ridiculous
regulations. But when federal officials use U.S. taxpayer money to engage in a public
spectacle of bribery and blackmail of foreign countries in a desperate attempt to win
their support or their vote, Americans are nonplussed.

One of the biggest examples of the moral numbness and blindness that afflicts
Americans has been the federal government’s horrific conduct against the Iraqi
people, both before and after the end of the Persian Gulf War in 1991.

Before the war, the U.S. government furnished chemical and biological weapons to
Saddam Hussein, with the express intention that he use them against the Iranian
people. Let that sink in: Federal officials entered into a partnership (or conspiracy, if
you prefer, given that federal officials kept the agreement secret for many years) with
Saddam Hussein in which the U.S. government agreed to (and did) furnish Saddam
with U.S.-made weapons of mass destruction and he, in turn, agreed to (and did)
use those weapons against the Iranian people. (See the second list of links in my
article “Points to Ponder at Five Minutes before Midnight.”)

When U.S. Senator Robert Byrd (D-W.Va.) recently asked U.S. Secretary of
Defense Donald Rumsfeld about the germ transfers to Saddam Hussein, Rumsfeld
innocently replied, “I have never heard anything like what you’ve read, I have no
knowledge of it whatsoever, and I doubt it”. Rumsfeld added that he would ask the
Defense Department and other agencies to search their records for evidence of the
transfers.

How in the world could a high U.S. official not know or even forget about
transferring weapons of mass destruction to Saddam Hussein, especially given that
Rumsfeld himself played a key role in the foreign policy shift to Iraq in the 1980s and
was even assigned by the first Bush administration to cozy up to Saddam Hussein?

Oh, it just couldn’t be that Rumsfeld was lying to Senator Byrd when he played the
innocent, could it? U.S. federal officials don’t lie. They don’t commit perjury. They
don’t use fake and false evidence. They don’t furnish weapons of mass destruction
to brutal foreign dictators. They don’t teach dictators how to torture their own
people. They don’t engage in obstruction of justice. Only corrupt foreign officials do
those types of things.

After the Persian Gulf War, instead of simply entering into a peace treaty with Iraq
that would have brought hostilities to an end, the feds employed the method that was
utilized at the end of the Korean War (another war waged without the constitutionally
required declaration of war from Congress): Keep the tensions and hostilities going
as long as possible, which provides a constant and continual threat justifying
ever-increasing budgets for the military-industrial complex.

Thus, year after year the feds have engaged in continual illegal bombing attacks
against the people of Iraq (enforcing the so-called no-fly zones in the absence of any
UN resolution authorizing either the zones or the attacks) and in enforcing what is
arguably the most brutal and comprehensive set of economic sanctions in history.
(See the first list of links in my article “Points to Ponder at Five Minutes before
Midnight.”)

The horrible significance of those economic sanctions is twofold: Not only have they
contributed to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi children, but year after
year federal officials have been even more indifferent to those deaths than they were
to the deaths of the Branch Davidian children, whom they gassed, or to the death of
Randy Weaver’s boy, whom they shot in the back.

(Interestingly, the feds are planning to use the same CS gas against the Iraqis that
they used against the Branch Davidians, despite the fact that the gas violates the
1993 Chemical Weapons Convention. Morever, Pentagon officials apparently intend
to again use depleted-uranium bullets in the upcoming invasion, despite the fact that
in the Gulf War such bullets had a lasting radioactive effect on both U.S. servicemen
and the Iraqi people. The government’s indifference to the ammunition’s radioactive
effect on its own soldiers brings to mind the scene in Braveheart in which the king
orders his archers to fire arrows into the middle of the conflict; when the king’s aide
points out that the arrows will kill their own soldiers, the king simply responds that
the arrows will kill the other soldiers too.)

What type of government would react with indifference to a failed and destructive
policy of economic sanctions that it knows is contributing the deaths of multitudes of
innocent children? What type of government would employ a policy that squeezed
the life out of children in the hope of persuading their parents to oust their ruler from
office? What type of government would subject its own soldiers to radiation without
any warning? Indeed, what type of government would put its own citizens in harm’s
way by leaving such a policy in effect after being warned by terrorists after the 1993
World Trade Center attack that such a policy would motivate more terrorist attacks
against Americans?

There is a rot at the center of the American empire, and the rot has been there a long
time. Unfortunately, it is a rot that the American people simply do not want to
confront. It’s just too painful to confront the possibility that the root of their woes lies
with the rot at the center of their empire.

It was the same in the Soviet Union. Most Russians who worked for the Soviet
government were the same as Americans who work for the U.S. government — they
were honest, hard-working, ordinary people who believed in their country, worked
hard at their jobs, and were busy raising their families.

But at the core of the Soviet system was a rot, and that rot attracted a certain type of
vermin that thrived off the rot. And no matter how devoted and hard-working the
ordinary Soviet worker was, his dedication and labor could not eradicate the rot at
the core of the Soviet empire. The problem was a systemic one.

One of the worst consequences of this type of rot is not only that it diminishes the
moral consciousness of people in a society but also that it causes them to live what
might be called the “life of the lie.” The affliction enables them to easily recognize
wrongdoing by foreign regimes but precludes them from recognizing the wrongdoing
of their own government.

Thus, if it was the Soviet government incarcerating Russian citizens for the rest of
their lives without a trial and without even being permitted to speak to an attorney,
Americans would be outraged. If it was the Soviet government torturing criminal
suspects or prisoners of war, Americans would be outraged. If it was the Soviet
government using innocent children as an instrument of foreign policy, Americans
would be outraged. If it was the Soviet government spying on and monitoring the
activities of the Russian people, Americans would be outraged. If it was the Soviet
government secretly spying on UN Security Council members, Americans would be
outraged. If it was the Soviet government waging a war of aggression against
Afghanistan or Czechoslovakia, Americans would be outraged.

But if it’s the U.S. government contributing to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of
Iraqi children through the most brutal set of economic sanctions in history, sacrificing
American GIs and killing tens of thousands of Iraqis in a “liberating” war of
aggression of Iraq, arresting and incarcerating U.S. citizens for the rest of their lives
without a trial and without being permitted to even talk to a lawyer, and torturing
both POWs and criminal suspects, all of a sudden the conscience of all too many
Americans disintegrates into mush. Thus, for example, while people consider it evil
for Saddam Hussein to have used chemical weapons against the Iranian people, they
feel it was just an “honest mistake in foreign policy” for U.S. officials to have
furnished those weapons to him with the express intention that he use them against
the Iranian people.

Neither Saddam Hussein nor Osama bin Laden nor North Korea nor Iran nor the
Islamic world is the biggest threat to the liberty, health, safety, and welfare of the
American people. Instead, that threat lies with the cancerous rot that continues to
grow at the center of the American empire — a rot that in fact comes with empire.
Until Americans finally confront that uncomfortable truth, they will continue to suffer
the consequences. Unfortunately, it might take a catastrophe before they decide to
do so.
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