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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 12:25:48 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
Thats all in the past just as is the Bush family's connections with Adolph Hitler.

BTW what does this comment mean?

"outrageous anti-war activities"

You mean its outrageous to be anti-war?

Gee, if so, what would your pastor say? Are you a war monger?
Maybe that comment was ill conceived?

BTW I don't support either Bush or Kerry. I'm Canadian.

BUT, when I lived in L.A. as a teenager, I helped to organize anti-war demonstrations against LBJ and the Vietnam War. I'm proud of it. It was absolutely the right thing to do. When your country is involved in commiting a serious crime against another country that was no threat to your country, it is a crime to support it or your own soldiers. I do NOT believe in the concept of "My Country, Right or Wrong". Sorry but thats how Hitler came to power.

Here's the REAL story of Napalm and Americans torturing and genocide against the Vietnamese people:

free.freespeech.org



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 12:32:48 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
This famous photograph has embarrassed a lot of American patriots. Not because they care the slightest bit about what Americans did to the Vietnamese people, but because it revealed our war crimes to the world. Back in 1972 the U.S. Corporate Mafia Government didn’t have the almost total control of the press that it enjoys today.



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 12:33:21 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Behind the children in the above photo, in that mass of gray smoke in the background, lie the burning, napalmed bodies of their parents, their brothers and sisters and friends. Americans inflicted horrific suffering on innocent children and civilian people all over Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos for 13 years. Trang Bang was just one of countless napalm attacks, very few of which were ever publicized in Pulitzer Prize winning photographs. There were thousands of My Lai massacres all over Vietnam, and the U.S. Army routinely photographed its own war crimes.



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 12:34:37 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
Sweep all that under the rug. If one of the rarely-publicized atrocities like Trang Bang can be blamed on our South Vietnamese puppets, then many grossly immoral American patriots can feel a whole lot better about all of it.

Well, suppose this particular mass-murder was carried out by one of our South Vietnamese servants. The fact remains that South Vietnamese pilots were trained by Americans, the jets they flew were built by Americans, the napalm they dropped was made by Americans, and the South Vietnamese military obeyed the orders of their American masters.



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 12:35:09 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
Honest people will have no trouble admitting that the napalm attacks on the civilian men, women and children of all villages like Trang Bang were fundamentally American attacks. Whether or not any particular atrocity was carried out directly by American pilots or soldiers, they were always ordered by American military commanders. Every bloody, nightmarish atrocity was just one of countless others, each a part of the whole, evil, racist American terror campaign against those courageous Vietnamese people who dared to fight for their freedom and independence from America.

But pro-government American patriots are pathologically dishonest people. They’ll go to their moldy graves convinced that we had some sort of God-given right to commit our racist war crimes against Vietnamese women and children.
free.freespeech.org



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 12:36:17 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
&#9658“Until we go through it ourselves, until our people cower in the shelters of New York, Washington, Chicago, Los Angeles and elsewhere while the buildings collapse overhead and burst into flames, and dead bodies hurtle about and, when it is over for the day or the night, emerge in the rubble to find some of their dear ones mangled, their homes gone, their hospitals, churches, schools demolished — only after that gruesome experience will we realize what we are inflicting on the people of Indochina...”

— William Shirer
author
1973



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 12:37:42 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
Kim Phuc, the little girl in the center of the photo above, was one of the survivors of the napalm attack on her village. Many years later she described her experience:

“I remember I was nine years old, just a child. That night we heard the Viet Cong were coming and that they wanted to use the village. And then in the daytime, the soldiers came in and there was fighting.

“We were so scared. I remember my family decided to seek refuge in the temple, the pagoda, because we thought it was a holy place. We could seek refuge there and we could be safe. I did not hear the explosion but I saw the fire around me.

“And suddenly my clothes were burnt off by fire. I saw the fire over my body and especially my arm. I remember at that moment I thought I would be ugly, and not normal like other children.

“I was so scared because I did not see anyone around me. Just fire and smoke. I was crying and I was running out of the fire and the miracle was my feet were not burned. I kept running and running and running.

“My parents could not get past the fire, so they turned back to the temple and they sheltered there.

“My aunt and two cousins died. One was three years old and one just nine months — two babies.

“After that I passed out.”

The American napalm caused Kim to suffer 3rd degree burns over more than half her body. The photographer, Nick Ut, rushed her to a hospital and she subsequently endured fourteen months of painful rehabilitation. To this day the scars cause her physical pain, but she has found a way to be free of the emotional pain through forgiveness and religion.



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 12:40:41 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
Neighborhood Bully
Ramsey Clark on American Militarism

Interview by Derrick Jensen
The Sun magazine, August 2001
thesunmagazine.org

When I picture a high-ranking government official, I think of someone who is corrupt. I think of a corporate shill. I think of someone who is not a friend to the people of this country. I think of Lord Acton’s famous line about power corrupting, and absolute power corrupting absolutely. I think of the disdain with which so many Americans have viewed so many of their leaders for so many years.

Former attorney general Ramsey Clark is different. Despite having once been the chief law-enforcement officer of this country, he consistently takes the side of the oppressed.

Born to power — Clark’s father was attorney general in the 1940s and later a Supreme Court justice — the University of Chicago Law School graduate was appointed assistant attorney general by John F. Kennedy in 1961 and went on to head that department as attorney general under Lyndon Johnson from 1967 to 1969. During his years in the Justice Department, Clark was a staunch supporter of the civil-rights movement. While in charge of government efforts to protect the protesters in Alabama, he witnessed firsthand “the enormous violence that was latent in our society toward unpopular people.” He had a similar experience when he was sent to Los Angeles after the rioting in Watts and discovered abuses by the police and the National Guard.

Although back then, Clark didn’t take the strong antiwar stance he advocates today, his Justice Department record boasts some major accomplishments: He supervised the drafting and passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the Civil Rights Act of 1968. He denounced police shootings and authorized prosecution of police on charges of brutality and wrongful death. He opposed electronic surveillance and refused to authorize an FBI wiretap on Martin Luther King Jr. He fought hard against the death penalty and won, putting a stay on federal executions that lasted until this year [2001], when Timothy McVeigh’s death sentence was carried out.

After a failed bid for the Senate in 1976, Clark abandoned government service and set out to provide legal defense to victims of oppression. As an attorney in private practice, he has represented many controversial clients over the years, among them antiwar activist Father Philip Berrigan; Native American political prisoner Leonard Peltier; the Branch Davidians, whose compound in Waco, Texas, was destroyed by government agents; Sheik Omar Abd El-Rahman, who was accused of masterminding the World Trade Center bombing; and Lori Berenson, an American held in a Peruvian prison for allegedly supporting the revolutionary Tupac Amaru movement there. Clark’s dedication to defending unpopular, and even hated, figures has also led him to represent such clients as Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic and far-right extremist Lyndon LaRouche.

Clark is founder and chairperson of the International Action Center, the largest antiwar movement in the United States. A vocal critic of U.S. military actions around the globe, he calls government officials “international outlaws,” accusing them of “killing innocent people because we don’t like their leader.” He has traveled to Iraq, North Vietnam, Serbia, and other embattled regions of the world to investigate the effects of American bombing and economic sanctions there. The sanctions, he says, are particularly inhumane:

“They’re like the neutron bomb, which is the most ‘inspired’ of all weapons, because it kills the people and preserves the property, the wealth. So you get the wealth and you don’t have the baggage of the hungry, clamoring poor.”

After the Gulf War, in 1991, Clark initiated a war-crimes tribunal, which tried and found guilty President George Bush and Generals Colin Powell and Norman Schwarzkopf, among others. Clark went on to write a book, The Fire This Time (Thunder’s Mouth Press, 1992; International Action Center, 2002), describing the crimes he says were committed by U.S. and NATO forces during the Gulf War. When asked why he focuses on the crimes of his own country, instead of those committed by Iraq, Clark says that we, as citizens, need to announce our principles and “force our government to adhere to them. When you see your government violating those principles, you have the highest obligation to correct what your government does, not point the finger at someone else.”

The interview took place on a dreary day last November [2000], when the presidential election was still undecided. We have a new [illegitimate] president now, but Clark’s criticisms of U.S. foreign policy are, if anything, more relevant with George W. Bush in the Oval Office. I met with Clark in the offices of the International Action Center (39 West 14th St., #206, New York, NY 10011, www.iacenter.org). Books lined every wall, except for a fairly large area devoted to photographs of Clark’s two children, his numerous grandchildren, and his wife of more than fifty years.

* * *

Jensen: According to the federal government’s Defense Planning Guide of 1992, the first objective of U.S. foreign policy is to convince potential rivals that they “need not aspire” to “a more aggressive posture to defend their legitimate interests.” The implication seems to be that the U.S. intends not to let other countries actively defend their own interests. To what extent does U.S. foreign policy in action reflect that goal?

Clark: Our foreign policy has been a disaster since long before that planning guide — for a lot longer than we’d like to believe. We can look all the way back to the arrogance of the Monroe Doctrine, when the United States said, “This hemisphere is ours,” ignoring all the other people who lived here, too. For a part of this past century, there were some constraints on our capacity for arbitrary military action — what you might call the inhibitions of the Cold War — but with the collapse of the Soviet Union, we’ve acquired a headier sense of what we can get away with.

Our overriding purpose, from the beginning right through to the present day, has been world domination — that is, to build and maintain the capacity to coerce everybody else on the planet: nonviolently, if possible; and violently, if necessary. But the purpose of our foreign policy of domination is not just to make the rest of the world jump through hoops; the purpose is to facilitate our exploitation of resources. And insofar as any people or states get in the way of our domination, they must be eliminated — or, at the very least, shown the error of their ways.

I’m not talking about just military domination. U.S. trade policies are driven by the exploitation of poor people the world over. Vietnam is a good example of both the military and the economic inhumanity. We have punished its government and people mercilessly, just because they want freedom. The Vietnamese people had to fight for thirty years to achieve freedom — first against the French, and then against the United States. I used to be criticized for saying that the Vietnamese suffered 2 million casualties, but I’ve noticed that people now say 3 million without much criticism. Yet that war was nothing compared to the effects of twenty years of sanctions, from 1975 to 1995, which brought the Vietnamese people — a people who had proven to be invincible when threatened by physical force on their own land — down to such dire poverty that they were taking to open boats in stormy seas, and drowning, to get to a refugee camp in Hong Kong, a place no one in his or her right mind would want to be. They went simply because they saw no future in their own country.

I went to North Vietnam in the summer of 1971, when the U.S. was trying to destroy civilian dikes through bombing. Our government figured that if it could destroy Vietnam’s capacity for irrigation, it could starve the people into submission.

Jensen: Which, in itself, is a war crime.

Clark: Sure, but since when does international law stop the U.S. government — except when it comes to laws made by the World Trade Organization, where it’s to the advantage of the owners of capital for the government to obey them?

The U.S. figured that if the Vietnamese couldn’t control their water supply, then they couldn’t grow rice, and they wouldn’t be able to feed themselves. At that time, they were producing about five tons of rice to the hectare, which is extremely productive. The economy was based on the women. The men were living in tunnels to the south with a bag of rice, a bag of ammunition, and a rifle; some had been there for years. And we were still bombing them mercilessly, inflicting heavy casualties. Yet they survived.

The sanctions, on the other hand, brought their economy down below that of Mozambique — then the poorest country in the world, with a per capita income of about eighty dollars per year.

All of this reflects a U.S. foreign policy that is completely materialistic and enforced by violence, or the threat of violence, and economic coercion.

Jensen: Do you think most Americans would agree that U.S. foreign policy has been “a disaster”?

Clark: Sadly, I think most Americans don’t have an opinion about our foreign policy. Worse than that, when they do think about it, it’s in terms of the demonization of enemies and the exaltation of our capacity for violence.

When the Gulf War started in 1991, you could almost feel a reverence come over the country. We had a forty-two-day running commercial for militarism. Nearly everybody was glued to CNN, and whenever they saw a Tomahawk cruise missile taking off from a navy vessel somewhere in the Persian Gulf, they practically stood up and shouted, “Hooray for America!” But that missile was going to hit a market in Basra or someplace, destroy three hundred food stalls, and kill forty-two very poor people. And we considered that a good thing.

It’s very difficult to debate military spending in this country today — which is unbelievable, because our military spending is absolutely, certifiably insane. Just to provide one example: We still have twenty-two commissioned Trident nuclear submarines, which are first-strike weapons. Any one of those submarines can launch twenty-four missiles simultaneously. Each of those missiles can contain as many as seventeen independently targeted, maneuverable nuclear warheads. And each of those warheads can travel seven thousand nautical miles and supposedly hit within three hundred feet of its predetermined target. If we fire them in opposite directions, we can span fourteen thousand nautical miles: halfway around the world at the equator. This means we can take out 408 centers of human population, hitting each with a nuclear warhead ten times as powerful as the bomb that incinerated Nagasaki.

Jensen: This is all from one submarine?

Clark: One submarine. And we have twenty-two of them. It’s an unthinkable machine. Why would you have it? What kind of mind would conceive of such a machine? What justification could there be for its existence? What would be the meaning of daring to use it?

Yet the debate about military spending in this country never raises these questions. Think back to 1980, when President Carter and Governor Reagan were arguing about the military budget. At that time, you could see the end of the Cold War approaching; the risk of superpower conflict was waning rapidly. Carter came in with a 7 percent increase in the budget, when it should have been reduced. And Reagan, of course, topped him with a proposal for an 11 percent increase. Carter’s response was that he could spend 7 percent more effectively than Reagan could spend 11 percent, so we’d be stronger on Carter’s program. Nowhere in this debate did we — or do we now — hear anything about the morality or the sanity (even the fiscal sanity) of such huge military budgets.

Our foreign policy is based on the use of our military might as an enforcer, exactly as Teddy Roosevelt implied when he said that we should “speak softly and carry a big stick.” What does that mean? It means: “Do what I say, or I’ll smash your head in. I won’t make a lot of noise about it; I’ll just do it.”

Jensen: How many times has the United States invaded Latin America in the last two hundred years?

Clark: It depends on who’s doing the counting, but in the twentieth century alone, it was undoubtedly almost once per year. Off the top of my head, I could count probably seventy instances.

Jensen: And, of course, it was the same in the nineteenth century.

Clark: We sent the word out pretty early. We had to worry about the British and the Spanish for a long time, but we were determined to make this “our” hemisphere — while, at the same time, certainly not confining ourselves to just this side of the world.

We hear a lot of rhetoric about how the United States exports democracy all over the world, but if you really want to understand U.S. influence on other peoples, probably the best places to start are Liberia and the Philippines, which are our two preeminent colonies — I think it’s fair to call them that — in Africa and Asia.

We started in Liberia well before 1843, planning to send freed slaves there as one of the “solutions,” so to speak, to our slavery problem. Liberia became a U.S. colony in every sense of the word: “Liberia” is the name we gave the country; the capital, Monrovia, and the great port city, Buchanan, are both named after U.S. presidents; the government was organized and put in place directly by the United States; the national currency is the U.S. dollar. Given these close connections, you’d expect Liberia to be relatively well-off. But it would be difficult, even in Africa, to find a people more tormented and endangered and impoverished than Liberia’s.

It’s the same story in the Philippines, which we conquered during the Philippine-American War — commonly (and inaccurately) called the Spanish-American War. More than a million Filipinos died during that war from violence and dengue fever, a byproduct of the fighting. We had government testimony of widespread use of torture by U.S. troops and of a general giving orders to kill all of the males on Negros Island. Once, that island could feed more than the population of the entire Philippine archipelago. And what’s the condition of that island now, after a hundred years of American benevolence? It’s owned by twelve families and produces 60 percent of the sugar exported from the Philippines. The children of those who chop the cane starve because their families don’t even have enough land to grow their own vegetables. Per capita income in the Philippines ten years ago was less than six hundred dollars. Per capita income in Japan, by contrast, was more than twenty-four thousand dollars. Even the poorest countries in the region have per capita incomes double or triple that of the Philippines.

So what have Liberia and the Philippines gotten out of being de facto colonies of the United States? Poverty, division, confusion, and tyrannical governments: Ferdinand Marcos was our man in Manila. We installed one dictator after another in Liberia.

These two countries represent a small part of our foreign policy, but it’s a part where you would expect us to be the most attentive to the well-being of the people. Yet few have suffered more in other parts of the world.

Jensen: So how do we maintain our national self-image as God’s gift to the world, the great bastion of democracy?

Clark: But we’re not a democracy. It’s a terrible misunderstanding and a slander to the idea of democracy to call us that. In reality, we’re a plutocracy: a government by the wealthy. Wealth has its way. The concentration of wealth and the division between rich and poor in the U.S. are unequaled anywhere. And think of whom we admire most: the Rockefellers and Morgans, the Bill Gateses and Donald Trumps. Would any moral person accumulate a billion dollars when there are 10 million infants dying of starvation every year? Is that the best thing you can find to do with your time?

Jensen: I remember seeing a statistic a few years ago that summed up our priorities for me: for the price of a single b-1 bomber — about $285 million — we could provide basic immunization treatments to the roughly 575 million children in the world who lack them, thus saving 2.5 million lives annually.

Clark: Such comparisons have a powerful illustrative impact, but they imply that if the money weren’t spent on bombers, it might be put to good use. The fact is, however, that if the b-1 were canceled, we still wouldn’t spend the money on vaccinations, because it wouldn’t serve the trade interests of the United States. It’s not a part of our vision.

Jensen: What, then, is our vision?

Clark: Central to our foreign policy has been the active attempt to deprive governments and peoples of the independence that comes from self-sufficiency in the production of food. I’ve believed for many years that a country that can’t produce food for its own people can never really be free. Iran is a good example of this. We overthrew the democratically elected government in Iran and installed the Shah. For twenty-five years, Iran was our surrogate in the Middle East, a hugely important region. After the Shah was overthrown by his own people, CIA chief William Colby called installing the Shah the CIA’s proudest achievement and said, “You may think he failed, but for twenty-five years, he served us well.”

Jensen: Serving us well, in this case, included killing tens of thousands of Iranians just in the year before he left office.

Clark: He certainly killed as many as he dared, especially in that last year, 1978. I’ve always said it was about thirty-seven thousand that year, but we’ll never know exactly how many. I think there were two thousand gunned down on Black Friday alone, that August. There were a million people out on the streets that day, and they came through Jaleh Square, many wearing shrouds so that it would be convenient to bury them if they were killed. Huey helicopters fired on them from a hundred feet in the air with fifty-caliber machine guns.

Jensen: U.S.-supplied Hueys?

Clark: The Hueys were fabricated in Esfahan, Iran, from U.S.-supplied parts. In fact, the fabrication of those Hueys provides an interesting insight into the effects of U.S. influence. In 1500, Esfahan was one of the ten biggest cities in the world, with about half a million people. Culturally, it remained almost pristine until 1955, the year after the Shah took power. As part of the Shah’s efforts to fulfill his dream of making Iran the fifth great industrial power in the world, he made Esfahan a center of industrialization. By 1970, the population had increased to 1.5 million, including about eight hundred thousand peasants who had come to live in the slums around this once fabulous city.

Once again, the result of U.S. foreign policy was poverty, anger, hurt, and suffering for the majority. While the canal systems that had supported enough agriculture to feed the population for a couple of millennia were going into decay, causing Iran to import most of its food, the country was buying arms. We sold them more than $22 billion in arms between 1972 and 1977 — everything they wanted, except nuclear weapons.

Iran isn’t the only Middle Eastern nation dependent upon food imports. Today twenty-two Arab states import more than half of their food. This makes them extremely vulnerable to U.S. economic pressure.

Egypt is a great example of this. It’s the second-largest U.S.-aid recipient in the world, after Israel. Can you imagine what sanctions would do to Cairo? You’ve got 12 million people living there, 10 million of them in real poverty. The city would be bedlam in ninety days. There would be rebellion in the streets.

The same is true of the other Arab countries. They might think they’ve got wealth because of their oil, but Iraq has oil, and it hasn’t helped that country survive the sanctions. There, sanctions have forced impoverishment on a people who had a quality of life that was by far the best in the region. They had free, universal healthcare and a good educational system. Now they’re dying at a rate of about eighteen thousand per month as a direct result of sanctions imposed by the United States in the name of the UN Security Council — the most extreme sanctions imposed in modern times.

The U.S. helped maneuver Iraq into a position where it was one of those twenty-two Arab nations importing more than half its food, and I have always believed that we maneuvered it, as well, into attacking Iran, in that god-awful war that cost a million young men their lives for no purpose. After the collapse of the Shah’s regime in 1979, Iraq thought that Iran couldn’t defend itself, but didn’t take into account the passion that twenty-five years of suffering had created in the population — a passion so strong that you had fifteen-year-old kids running barefoot through swamps into a hail of bullets, and if they got near you, you were dead. They had a pair of pants and a rifle, and that was about it. Meanwhile, Iraq, which was supported by both the Soviet Union and the United States, had artillery it could mount shoulder to shoulder and armored vehicles with cannons and machine guns. But the war was still a stalemate.

In any case, by the late 1980s, Iraq was emerging as too powerful a nation in the Middle East. And, fatally for Iraq, it wasn’t reliable enough to be our new surrogate. No one would be as good a surrogate for us as the Shah’s Iran had been.

So we had to take out Iraq, under the pretense of defending Kuwait. First we bombed Iraq brutally: 110,000 aerial sorties in forty-two days, an average of one every thirty seconds, which dropped 88,500 tons of bombs. (These are Pentagon figures.) We destroyed the infrastructure — to use a cruel euphemism for life-support systems. Take water, for example: We hit reservoirs, dams, pumping stations, pipelines, and purification plants. Some associates and I drove into Iraq at the end of the second week of the war, and there was no running water anywhere. People were drinking water out of the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers.

The Gulf War showed, for the first time, that you could destroy a country without setting foot on its soil. We probably killed a hundred thousand, and our total casualties, according to the Pentagon, were 157 — most of them from friendly fire and accidents. The Iraqis caused only minimal casualties. One of those notoriously inaccurate Scud missiles, fired toward Saudi Arabia, came wobbling down and somehow hit a mess-hall tent, killing thirty-seven American soldiers. That’s a big chunk of the total casualties right there. We didn’t lose a single tank, whereas we destroyed seventeen hundred Iraqi armored vehicles, plinking them with depleted-uranium ammunition and laser-guided missiles.

But, as with Vietnam, the sanctions that followed the war have been infinitely more damaging, causing fifteen times the number of casualties. The sanctions against Iraq are genocidal conduct under the law, according to the 1948 United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide — which, by the way, the United States refused to endorse until 1988 and explicitly refuses to comply with to this day. The sanctions against Iraq have killed more than 1.5 million people, more than half of them children under the age of five, an especially vulnerable segment of the population. Particularly in their first year, children are more susceptible to disease and malnutrition, and to the malnutrition of their mother. Many Iraqi mothers are now so malnourished that they cannot produce milk. They try to give their children sugar water as a substitute, but because the United States destroyed the infrastructure, the water is contaminated: within forty-eight hours, the child is dead. And that child could have been saved by a rehydration tablet that costs less than a penny, but is not available because of the sanctions. This is in a country that once produced 15 percent of its own pharmaceuticals: now it can’t even get the raw materials. We have, in an act of will, impoverished a whole population.

Jensen: Where do you see such policies taking us?

Clark: The great issue of the twenty-first century will be that of the relationship between the rich and poor nations, and of the elimination of some percentage of those whom we consider not only expendable, but even undesirable. In many parts of the world, we’ve got 30 percent of the labor force unemployed and unemployable, and new technology renders them unnecessary. Why, then, from the perspective of capital — and, therefore, from the perspective of U.S. foreign policy — should we support them? Why worry about AIDS in Africa? Why worry about hunger and malnutrition in Bangladesh or Somalia?

Jensen: Let me see if I’ve got this right: From the perspective of those in power, it’s desirable to keep the poor alive only insofar as they’re useful, and the poor are useful only as labor, or as an excess pool of labor to drive wages down. Beyond that, who needs them?

Clark: Yes. It’s hard for me to see how we will find meaningful and desirable employment for the poorest segment of the world’s population in the face of both ecological degradation and technology’s capacity to produce more than we need. How did Dostoevski put it? “The cruelest punishment that can be inflicted on a person is to force him to work hard at a meaningless task.” That may or may not be true, but we do know that such make-work is a form of psychological torture. If your labor isn’t needed, if you don’t have skills, then what are you worth to a society that won’t even bother to vaccinate your children or provide food for your starving infants?

In 1900, half of the labor force in the United States was involved in agriculture. Now it’s probably less than 5 percent. In 1900, 80 percent of the labor force in China was involved in food production. When that figure comes down to 10 percent, what are those other 90 percent going to do?

Jensen: While we’ve been talking, I’ve been thinking about a conversation that took place years ago between Senator George McGovern and Robert Anderson, the president of the military contractor Rockwell International. McGovern asked Anderson if he wouldn’t rather build mass-transit systems than b-1 bombers. Anderson said he would, but they both knew that there was no chance Congress would appropriate money for public transportation.

Clark: They were absolutely right. Capital in the United States would never accept that sort of shift in priorities, for many reasons. The first is that the military is a means of international domination, and any change that might threaten that domination will not be allowed to take place. The second reason is that capital requires continuing, ever expanding demand, and mass transit shrinks demand for automobiles and gas.

When my family moved to Los Angeles when I was a kid, before World War II, it was a paradise. The word smog hadn’t been invented. There were no such things as freeways. There were mountains, beaches, deserts, and wildlife, and 49 percent of the land in the area was owned by the people of the United States. But the machinery that would destroy that paradise had already been put in motion.

In the 1920s, there had been struggles over whether there would continue to be mass transit in Los Angeles, which at the start of the century had an elaborate streetcar system. But powerful industries — the oil refiners and the automobile manufacturers — fiercely opposed what the people obviously needed. The citizens of Los Angeles were a fast-growing population with long distances to travel, and they needed to get there fast and cheaply. If they’d developed more mass transit, it would have led to an entirely different way of life. Instead, LA is now a big, sprawling metropolis with a tangle of freeways and millions of cars, unbelievable in its endless banality and congestion and noise and pollution. But think of what LA’s maintaining its excellent mass-transit system would have done to the petrochemical industry and the automobile industry, with all of their accessories — tires, parts, and so on.

Capital promotes activities from which its owners can reap enormous profits. It does not matter if those activities are detrimental to living beings or communities. For example, those in power seem to have an unlimited imagination for conjuring up new excuses to throw money at the military. I was saddened by the almost pathetic naiveté of the people of this country some ten years ago, when we were talking about reaping a “peace dividend.”

Jensen: Which, of course, we never hear about anymore.

Clark: But people believed there would be a peace dividend! Instead, we’ve devised incredible schemes like SDI — the “Star Wars” Strategic Defense Initiative, which is back again.

Jensen: The argument now is that we need SDI to protect us from North Korea.

Clark: That’s crazy. In the current election, even more than in 1980, when Carter and Reagan were debating the military budget, we saw two candidates vying to prove that they each would provide a stronger defense. But defense from what? In order to keep increasing the demand for military products, we’re teaching moral and fiscal insanity. I was in South Africa a couple of weeks ago. After all the people there have suffered, you have to be so hopeful for them, yet they just spent over a billion dollars on a bunch of naval vessels.

And we’ve been consistently sold a bill of goods that has made people believe they’ve been heroic when they’ve done terrible things in the name of their country through military actions. I mean, how many of those pilots who bombed Vietnam — even the ones who became prisoners — ever said to themselves, “I wonder what it was like being a Vietnamese villager when I was coming over and dropping those bombs”?

Jensen: I kept thinking about that when Senator John McCain used his former-prisoner-of-war status to gain political capital, and I never heard anyone publicly confront him about killing civilians.

I remember once, when I lived in Spokane, Washington, there was a gala event called “A Celebration of Heroes.” The headliner was the Gulf War commander Norman Schwarzkopf. Neither the mainstream nor the alternative papers published articles, or even letters to the editor, about Schwarzkopf’s war crimes. I think that holding up mass murderers as heroes is as much a problem as holding up the rich.

Clark: Violence may not be as harmful as greed in the long run, because it’s harder to kill people directly than it is to kill them with sanctions. If you killed that many with bullets, your finger would get tired.

Colin Powell seems to be a compelling figure, but when he was asked during the Gulf War how many Iraqis he thought the United States had killed, his response was — and this is a direct quote — “Frankly, that’s a number that doesn’t interest me very much.” Now, aside from international law, which requires that all participants in war count their enemy dead, that is an extraordinarily inhumane statement. And then you see a fellow like General Barry McCaffrey, whom Clinton later named as his drug czar, coming in and attacking defenseless Iraqi troops as they withdrew, killing several thousand people just like that. [Snaps his finger.] That’s a war crime of the first magnitude. And yet these men are rewarded; they’re seen as heroes.

Jensen: On another subject, you’ve also spoken out against our nation’s prison system.

Clark: One of the most devastating things that have happened in this society — and one of the most ignored — is the stunning growth of the prison system and the use of capital punishment. In the 1960s, a time of maximum domestic turbulence, we were able to bring the government out against the death penalty, leading to a halt in federal executions in 1963. In fact, the first year in U.S. history that there were no executions anywhere was 1968. We also had a moratorium on federal prison construction. The federal-prison population was then around twenty thousand. Now, of course, we’re building prisons like mad, and the federal-prison population is currently about 145,000.

In 1971, prisoners at Attica in New York State rebelled against horrible prison conditions. (Conditions overall are worse today.) The suppression of that rebellion is still the bloodiest day of battle between Americans on American soil since the Civil War: thirty-seven people were killed. At that time, there were fewer than thirteen thousand prisoners in the whole New York prison system; today there are about seventy-five thousand. And the population of the state hasn’t risen 5 percent.

Across the country, more than 2 million people are in prison. And in California — which we tend to think of as a trendsetter for the rest of the country — 40 percent of African American males between the ages of seventeen and twenty-seven, the most vital years of their lives, are either in prison or under some form of community supervision or probation. What’s the reason behind this? It’s a means of controlling a major segment of the population. But what does it do to the people?

And what does it mean that we’ve got politicians like New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani, who insists on sending people to jail for what he calls “quality of life” crimes? What does it mean when 70 percent of young-adult African American males have arrest records? What does it mean when so many of these African Americans have had frightening and damaging experiences with the police? We say we’re “the land of the free and the home of the brave,” yet we have a prison system unrivaled in the so-called democratic societies, and probably in any society on the planet today. And we’re Lord High Executioner.

In the 1960s, South Africa was the world’s leading executioner for postjudicial convictions, executing about three hundred people every year — nearly one each day. Most years, all of those executed were black, with the occasional exception of a white who had been convicted of being part of the African National Congress’s resistance to apartheid. Back then, the principal argument we made in this country against the death penalty was “We don’t want to be like South Africa.” Part of the reason that argument worked is that the civil-rights movement was ascendant. Another is that people recognized that our executions were racist: For instance, 89 percent of the executions for rape, from the time statistics began to be collected until the Supreme Court abolished executions for rape, were of African American men. And although we don’t know the race of all the victims, because those statistics weren’t kept, those whose race we have been able to determine were all white. The imposition of the death penalty was — and remains — blatantly racist.

Now South Africa has abolished the death penalty; its constitution prohibits it. Prior to that, its supreme court found the death penalty to be a violation of international and domestic laws. Yet we come on like gangbusters for capital punishment. George W. Bush executed more people than any other governor in the history of the United States.

Jensen: You seem to be a good person, yet you filled a major government post. That seems to me an immense contradiction.

Clark: If your premises are correct, then that’s a terrible indictment of the system. There is something desperately wrong if we don’t have the best among us in government service. But it’s true; we drive them out.

I joined the Marines during World War II, but a bunch of my buddies were conscientious objectors. Even then, I realized that they were better men than I, that what they did took more courage. I mean, to join the Marines is a piece of cake: all you’ve got to do is go down to the recruitment center and sign up. But I’ve watched my conscientious-objector friends over the years, and I have to say that they’ve been very lonely; in some ways, their lives were pretty much wasted. We’re social creatures, and these men — boys, really, when they first made that decision — were ostracized for what they did, for following their conscience. And I think that lack of social esteem affected how they perceived themselves.

It seems the best among us often get purged. I have seen many new congresspeople come into Washington, and some of them are just such good people that you can hardly stand it — bright, articulate, and caring about issues. But it seems that, if they get reelected a few times, they start to sit around and scowl and drink too much, and their families break up. If you see this happen enough times, you begin to realize the enormous corrupting power of our political system. To be successful in it, you might have to make compromises that will cause you not to like yourself very much. And then you’ll have to compensate for that in some way. You can become excessively ambitious, or greedy, or corrupt, or something else, but something’s got to happen, because if you don’t like yourself, what do you do?

Young people often ask me if they should go to law school, and I always say, “If you’re not tough, you’ll get your values beaten out of you, and you’ll move into a kind of fee-grabbing existence where your self-esteem will depend on how much you bill per hour and what kind of clients you bring in to the law firm. You might find yourself turning into nothing but a money mill.”

If we are to significantly change our culture, we need to recognize that we are held in thrall by two desperately harmful value patterns. One is the glorification of violence. We absolutely, irrationally, insanely glorify violence. We often think that we enjoy watching the good guys kill the bad guys, but the truth is that we enjoy watching the kill itself.

The other value is materialism. We are the most materialistic people who have ever lived. We value things over children. Indeed, the way we show how much we value children is by giving them things, to the point where a mother’s self-esteem depends on whether she’s the first in her neighborhood to get her child some new toy.

I think the hardest part for us is to break through the illusory world that the media create. Television is a big part of our reality. Children spend more time watching TV than they do in school or participating in any other activity. And television is a preacher of materialism above all else. It tells us constantly to want things. More money is spent on commercials than on the entertainment itself. And that entertainment is essentially hypnotic.

I think often of the Roman poet Juvenal’s line about “bread and circuses.” All these distractions that now fill our lives are an unprecedented mechanism of social control, because they occupy so much of our time that we don’t reason, we don’t imagine, and we don’t use our senses. We walk though our day mesmerized, never questioning, never thinking, never appreciating. From this process we emerge a synthetic vessel without moral purpose, with no notion in our head or our heart of what is good for people, of what builds a healthier, happier, more loving society.

You began this interview by asking me about U.S. foreign policy, and I said that it’s been a failure. Here is the standard by which I would judge any foreign or domestic policy: has it built a healthier, happier, more loving society, both at home and abroad? The answer, in our case, is no on both counts.

Jensen: So what do we do?

Clark: I think the solution relies on the power of the idea, and the power of the word, and on a belief that, in the end, the ultimate power resides in the people.

In discussing the effects of U.S. foreign policy, we’ve been talking about only one part of the story. Another part is resistance — the power of the people. We saw that in the Philippines, when Marcos was deposed in a nonviolent revolution, and we saw that in Iran, when the Shah’s staggering power was overcome, as well, by a nonviolent revolution.

Of course, just getting rid of Marcos or the Shah is not the end of the story. People sometimes think that, after the glorious revolution, everybody is going to live happily ever after. But it doesn’t work that way. What they’ve gone through in the struggle has divided them, confused them, driven them to extremes of desperation.

I think what all of this means is that we each have to do our own part, and become responsible, civic-minded citizens: we have to realize that we won’t be happy unless we try to do our part. And if a small portion of us simply do our part, that will be enough. If even 1 percent of the people of this country could break out of the invisible chains, they could bring down this military-industrial complex — this tyranny of corporations, this plutocracy — overnight. That’s all it would take: 1 percent of the people.

We also have to realize that we’re going to be here only one time, and we’ve got to enjoy life, however hard it is. To miss the opportunity for joy is to miss life. Any fool can be unhappy; in fact, we make whole industries out of being unhappy, because happy people generally make lousy consumers. It’s interesting to see how the poor understand all of this better than the rich. This morning, I was in court over in Brooklyn, representing a group of Romany — they’re often called Gypsies, but they don’t like to be called that — who were claiming recognition for losses in the Holocaust. The Romany lost 1.5 million people, yet nobody pays any attention to their claims. In fact, last year [1999], the city of Munich, Germany, enacted legislation that is almost a verbatim reproduction of 1934 legislation prohibiting Romany from coming into the city: they’ll be arrested if they do. The Romany might be the most endangered people on the planet — even more so than the 200 million indigenous people around the globe. They are fugitives everywhere they go, persecuted everywhere. Yet, like the traditional indigenous peoples, they are people of exceptional joy. They sing and dance and have fun. They can’t see life as so much drudgery.

I saw that same joy among the civil-rights protesters in the 1960s. Watching them sing as they marched, I couldn’t help but realize that you feel better when you’re doing something you feel is right — no matter how hard it is.

Related pages

Antidote to American state terrorism:

Solutions: American Revolution 2
and a Humane Future of International Socialist Democracy

The social and political facts of life are exactly the opposite of the smooth-talking capitalist propaganda that is incessantly beamed at you through the mind-controlling mass-media. The televised, corporate, Disneyland version of reality is always trying to sell you the fantasy that America is basically a righteous “democracy” run by honest, God-fearin’ “elected representatives” who have “only your best interests at heart.” Meanwhile, in the hard, cold, real world, America is being run into the ground by a criminal plutocracy which ruthlessly exploits everybody else for as much as it can get away with. The plutocracy which invariably rules every capitalist society is in fact a greedy parasite of the working classes — who are the vast majority of people.

International socialist democracy is the natural next step in the world’s political evolution. Corporate capitalism is a morally degraded political dinosaur that is retarding the social and political evolution of the entire human race.



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 12:42:00 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
Interesting Photo of Wstera 02

free.freespeech.org

Women and children murdered at My Lai
by soldiers of the United States Army



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 12:42:52 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
"The war criminals of the United States Army, Navy, Marines and Air Force murdered three million people in Vietnam, in countless places like My Lai. Most of the victims were women and children.

The CIA even had an official program of state terrorism in Vietnam, known as “Operation Phoenix” or the “Phoenix Program”. Through the Phoenix Program, hundreds of thousands of people were tortured to death in provincial “interrogation centers” all over Vietnam. These torture centers were built specifically for that purpose by the United States. Women were always raped as part of the torture before being murdered. The large-scale terrorism, rape and mass-murder throughout the countryside was the collective policy of the CIA, the U.S. Army, the U.S. Air Force, the U.S. Marines and the U.S. Navy. The My Lai massacre itself was an operation of the Phoenix Program."

free.freespeech.org



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 12:43:46 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
Origins of the American genocide in Vietnam

The American genocide of the Vietnamese people had it’s origins immediately following World War II. America supported France in its attempt to regain its bloody colonial rulership over all Southeast Asia. But it was none other than the British, under the auspices of their American masters, who actually initiated the Vietnam War in 1945.

During the Yalta Conference, Britain was assigned the task of “disarming and repatriating the Japanese and restoring order” in Southern Indochina, since Britain had already been heavily involved in Burma. Britain chose to help its imperialist ally, France, reestablish its oppressive, racist, colonial regime over the Vietnamese people. It didn’t matter to the British government that the French colonial rulers had been part of the Vichy regime, which had collaborated with the Nazis. Or even that the Vichy French colonial rulers had therefore also collaborated with the Japanese occupation forces.

Why didn’t this matter to the British government? Because the British government, like their American masters, does not actually stand for principles like “democracy”, “humanitarianism” and “morality.” In reality it stands for nothing but the money and power of the British ruling classes. In addition, the British and French governments and plutocracies are inherently racist and Eurocentric, so the wishes and needs of the Vietnamese people did not matter in the least to them.

When British troops entered Vietnam in 1945 they discovered that the Vietnamese people had already disarmed the Japanese, and that Vietnam was unified under the leadership of Ho Chi Minh and the Vietminh forces. The Vietminh had been allies of the United States during the war, valiantly fighting the Japanese occupation forces.

So what did the British do? They rearmed the Japanese and used them to reinforce their own troops as they forcefully took control of Saigon, expelling the Vietminh. How’s that for loyalty and gratitude?

The British then forcefully maintained their occupation until large numbers of French troops began arriving three months later, whereupon they handed Saigon over to the French and withdrew. At that point the brutal French Indochina War began.

The French, having been devastated and humiliated by their own evil cowardice in WWII, proved to be equally incompetent in their war of oppression against the Vietnamese people. They required more and more assistance from their new masters, the Americans. But the will of the Vietnamese people to be free was greater than the will of the French to oppress them, and no amount of American assistance was sufficient. The French were finally defeated at Dien Bien Phu in 1954. At that point America’s direct control of the “Vietnam War” began.

It didn’t matter to the Americans that the Viet Minh had actually rescued downed American pilots of the U.S. 14th Air Force, saving them from sure torture and murder at hands of the bestial Japanese.

No, that counted for absolutely nothing with the plutocratic rulers of the United States Corporate Mafia Government. The U.S. government doesn’t honestly care about it’s own soldiers and airmen, much less people of another country. So this classic American backstabbing of a former ally set the tone for the appalling nightmare in Southeast Asia that would overwhelm the next 25+ years.

Ho Chi Minh was backstabbed by the U.S. Corporate Mafia Government because they simplistically labeled him a “Communist.”

However the truth was that initially, Ho Chi Minh actually admired all things “American”! During the war against the Japanese he had misjudged the true nature of America’s ruling plutocracy. Like millions of misinformed people around the world, he naively assumed that America was “the champion of democracy.” Perhaps he had no way of knowing any better at that time, but he believed America’s propaganda — that it stood for human values higher than ruthless self-interest.

With astonishing political naiveté Ho Chi Minh actually wrote many letters to President Truman and the State Department — asking for America’s help in liberating Vietnam from the French!

He even drafted a “Vietnamese declaration of independence,” modeling it on the American version, and beginning it with the words: “All men are created equal. They are endowed by their Creator with...”

One can imagine the evil laughter that must have echoed through the halls of the U.S. State Department.

Ho Chi Minh, and all the Vietnamese people, discovered America’s truly satanic nature the hard way:

“I would like to talk on behalf of all those veterans and say that several months ago in Detroit we had an investigation at which over 150 honorably discharged, and many very highly decorated, veterans testified to war crimes committed in Southeast Asia. These were not isolated incidents but crimes committed on a day-to-day basis with the full awareness of officers at all levels of command. ...

“They told stories that at times they had personally raped, cut off ears, cut off heads, taped wires from portable telephones to human genitals and turned up the power, cut off limbs, blown up bodies, randomly shot at civilians, razed villages in a fashion reminiscent of Genghis Khan, shot cattle and dogs for fun, poisoned food stocks and generally ravaged the countryside of South Vietnam, in addition to the normal ravage of war and the normal and very particular ravaging which is done by the applied bombing power of this country.”

— John Kerry
Navy lieutenant, leader of Vietnam Veterans Against the War
in testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
April 23, 1971



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 12:47:30 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
"U.S. Army atrocities
and Green Beret torture techniques

During the Kennedy and Johnson administrations the number of murderous U.S. military personnel invading Vietnam jumped from 23,000 in 1963 to 184,000 in 1966. They reached their peak during Dickhead Nixon’s presidency in 1969, with 542,000 American soldiers fighting the Viet Cong.

But that’s not all they were doing.

Too many of “our boys” committed sadistic crimes against humanity. American soldiers tortured prisoners. American soldiers sodomized, raped and murdered women and girls. American soldiers slaughtered entire villages of civilian men, women, children — even infants — in many, many places like My Lai and Thanh Phong.

From Rogue State: A Guide to the World’s Only Superpower
by William Blum:

The Green Berets taught its members who were slated for duty in Vietnam in the 1960s how to use torture as part of an interrogation.

The notorious Operation Phoenix, set up by the CIA to wipe out the Vietcong infrastructure, subjected suspects to torture such as:

electric shock to the genitals of both men and women

insertion into the ear of a six-inch dowel, which was tapped through the brain until the victim died

suspects were also thrown out of airborne helicopters to persuade the more important suspects to talk, although this should probably be categorized as murder of the ones thrown out, and a form of torture for those not.

In violation of the Geneva Convention, the US turned prisoners over to their South Vietnamese allies in full knowledge that they would be tortured, American military personnel often being present during the torture."




To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 12:48:25 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
The slaughter begins in earnest

"United States Air Force B-52 bomber crew
butchering Asian women and children
Meaning genocidal business, the United States Air Force launched the “Rolling Thunder” air assault on the people of Vietnam in 1964. This assault alone dropped more bombs on the little country than were used in all of World War II.

During the next five years, unknown hundreds of thousands of Vietnamese civilian men, women and children were butchered and burned alive by United States Air Force bomber crews. Vietnam was pounded with the equivalent of 22 tons of explosives for every square mile of territory.

That’s 300 pounds of high explosive for every man, woman and child.

A prime example: the United States Air Force mass-murdered tens of thousands of civilan men, women and children in Ben Tre city in 1968. Ben Tre was a city of 300,000 people in the Mekong Delta. The United States Air Force carpet-bombed it out of existence.

The officer in charge told reporters: “It was necessary to destroy the city in order to save it.”

“You always write it’s bombing, bombing, bombing. It’s not bombing, it’s air support.”

— Colonel David Opfer
United States Air Force
air attaché in Cambodia
complaining to news reporters
about their coverage of the genocide

During 13 years of America’s insane genocide of the people of Vietnam, eight million TONS of bombs (like Napalm and cluster bombs) and defoliants (Agent Orange) were dropped in total — and at least 3 MILLION Vietnamese people were slaughtered.

Most Americans cannot even imagine what that means.

“Until we go through it ourselves, until our people cower in the shelters of New York, Washington, Chicago, Los Angeles and elsewhere while the buildings collapse overhead and burst into flames, and dead bodies hurtle about and, when it is over for the day or the night, emerge in the rubble to find some of their dear ones mangled, their homes gone, their hospitals, churches, schools demolished — only after that gruesome experience will we realize what we are inflicting on the people of Indochina...”

— William Shirer
author
1973

free.freespeech.org



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 12:49:16 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
"THREE — MILLION — PEOPLE!

Along with the American Indian Genocide, the Vietnam Genocide ranks America right down there in the pits of hell — in such fine company as the German Nazis, the Israeli Zionists, the Croatian Ustashi, the Japanese military, the Italian Fascists, the Turkish military, the Spanish Conquistadors, the Romans, the Mongols and all such genocidal monsters.

The vast majority of Americans have absolutely nothing in their experience to compare it to. Yet it was happening in our lifetimes, for anybody born before 1975. The only decent human beings in America were those who spoke out against this monstrous evil. And those people who were courageous enough to march in the streets were rewarded with beatings by the dirty pigs and cold-blooded murder by the FBI and the National Guard.

Meanwhile, patriotic racist Americans continued to live their so-called “normal” lives, thoroughly indifferent to the bloody slaughter being carried out in their names, slobbering over their steaks and watching TV, playing golf and going to parties while Vietnamese children were BURNED ALIVE in their villages by OUR goddamned pilots, countless Vietnamese civilian women were brutally raped and murdered and whole families machine-gunned to death by OUR goddamned soldiers.

It wasn’t just the demonic Nazis who committed genocide. Our own evil American government and military have committed genocide too. By the MILLIONS.

And the overwhelming majority of the victims were helpless, innocent civilian people.

Civilian men. Women. Children.

See the story of My Lai for an example of our heroic American soldiers on the job — murdering Vietnamese babies and raping Vietnamese girls to make the world safe for corporations like Coca Cola and Standard Oil. "



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 12:50:06 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
"After the slaughter...
disease and more death

Thanks to racist American arrogance, self-righteousness and indifference, the Vietnamese people have continued to suffer. In 1985 it was estimated that fully one-third of the Vietnam was a toxic wasteland, thanks to the U.S. Air Force use of chemical defoliants like Agent Orange. All of this left Vietnam impoverished, the land severely polluted and covered with deadly cluster bombs — and the people psychologically traumatized. Thirty years of genocidal war were then followed by almost 20 years of a U.S.-led embargo.

In the years since the murdering, raping U.S. soldiers, Navy SEALS and airmen were finally defeated and kicked ignominiously out of Vietnam, America’s evil legacy has continued. Agent Orange has caused large-scale birth defects in succeeding generations of Vietnamese people and hundreds of thousands of cancer deaths among those the who were living in the areas sprayed with the defoliant.

Even the most conventional, reactionary elements of the U.S. media occasionally admit to American war crimes. In 1997 a Wall Street Journal report estimated that 500,000 children in Vietnam suffer from serious birth defects because of the American use of chemical weapons. No doubt the real figure is much higher.

The unexploded cluster bombs have created uncharted minefields, terrorizing everybody and preventing farmers from working in many arable fields and rice paddies. These American bombs continue to murder, dismember and cripple for life, thousands of Vietnamese children and young adults. "



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 12:51:11 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
“I believe that if we had and would keep our dirty, bloody, dollar soaked fingers out of the business of these [Third World] nations so full of depressed, exploited people, they will arrive at a solution of their own. And if unfortunately their revolution must be of the violent type because the ‘haves’ refuse to share with the ‘have-nots’ by any peaceful method, at least what they get will be their own, and not the American style, which they don’t want, and above all don’t want crammed down their throats by Americans.”

— General David Sharp
former U.S. Marine Commandant
1966

“We’re going to become guilty, in my judgement, of being the greatest threat to the peace of the world. It’s an ugly reality, and we Americans don’t like to face up to it. I hate to think of the chapter of American history that’s going to be written in the future in connection with our outlawry in Southeast Asia.”

— Senator Wayne Morse
(D-OR)
1967

“The greatest crime since World War II has been U.S. foreign policy.”

— Ramsey Clark
former U.S. Attorney General
under President Lyndon Johnson

“The only lesson that the U.S. government seems to have learned from Vietnam is the need for absolute control of the press.”

— David McGowan
author of Derailing Democracy



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 12:53:17 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
“The order was to destroy My Lai and everything in it.”

And the fully premeditated intention of Charlie Company was to murder every last man, woman and child in it as well.

Even though they were assigned to commit this routine American war crime by their officers, the soldiers’ personal motivation for the My Lai massacre was revenge, rape and racism — the Three R’s of the bestial education provided by the U.S. military. American troops were trained by the U.S. Army to see Vietnamese people as “things” or “animals”. GI jokers said “anything that’s dead and isn’t White is a VC.” It was open season on all Vietnamese people, including women and girls who were routinely raped. In their own sick minds American soldiers dehumanized the Vietnamese people, calling them “gooks” and “dinks”.

Journalist Seymour Hersh wrote of Charlie Company that by March of 1968 “many in the company had given in to an easy pattern of violence.” Such soldiers were totally blind to the humanity of the Vietnamese people because the American soldiers had degraded themselves to the status of filthy, evil, bloodthirsty animals. It takes a human being to recognize the humanity in another. A great many American soldiers chose to murder their own humanity with the officially-encouraged sadism of the Vietnam Genocide.

German Nazis and Israeli soldiers have exactly the same psychopathic mentality. And they too make the cowardly excuse that they were “just following orders.”

Encouraged by their evil officers, sadistic American soldiers systematically beat and tortured unarmed civilian people, sometimes using electric shocks to the genitals of both men and women. American soldiers murdered many civilian people in cold blood, usually by shooting or stabbing them. Shoving them out of high-flying helicopters so they could watch them fall to their deaths was a favorite entertainment. Some American soldiers liked to cut off people’s ears. Other American soldiers liked to cut off people’s fingers. American soldiers even cut off people’s heads. They burned whole villages. They poisoned wells. They shot people’s dogs and cattle for fun. It was not uncommon for American soldiers to sodomize and rape women and young girls before murdering them.

American animals-in-uniform were truly demon-possessed, and that was their own responsibility, regardless of the orders of their satanic officers. But all their countless atrocities were actually part of a vast operation called the Phoenix Program, an official CIA campaign of massive, systematic state terrorism in which Vietnamese people were tortured and murdered by the hundreds of thousands.

In the CIA’s psychopathic worldview, the Vietnamese “Commies” had to be mass-murdered and terrorized into seeing how fine, democratic and freedom-loving the system of American capitalism was."



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 12:53:50 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
"The heroic American soldiers who raped, stabbed and machine-gunned the women, old men, boys, girls and babies of My Lai 4 were led by Lt. William Calley and Capt. Ernest Medina.

Capt. Medina participated fully in the slaughter at My Lai. A young Vietnamese woman had been shot and was lying wounded on the ground. At one point Medina was seen nudging her body with his boot. Seeing that she was still alive, Capt. Medina took a step back, pointed his gun down at her and blew her away.

In a 1969 interview with Mike Wallace of CBS News, a totally unrepentant Capt. Medina tried to justify the slaughter of women, children and babies by suggesting they may have planted mines which killed American troops.

A total of 504 helpless human beings were sadistically slaughtered at My Lai 4 by soldiers of the United States Army. All of the victims were either old women, young women, old men, boys, girls or babies. There were no young Vietnamese men there. The American soldiers were never fired upon. They found no Viet Cong and no weapons. "



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 12:55:30 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
"Shortly after sunrise on March 16, 1968, a bright, clear, warm day, the helicopters began lifting approximately 80 men of Company C (First Battalion, 20th Infantry, 11th Light Infantry Brigade) from the base camp at Landing Zone Dottie and delivering them 11 kilometers away in the paddies west of My Lai 4.



“Our landing zone was the outskirts of town, on the left flank. There were about 25 of us and we went directly into the village. There wasn’t any enemy fire.”



“Guys were about to shoot these people,” photographer, Ron Haeberle remembers. “I yelled, ‘Hold it,’ and shot my picture. As I walked away, I heard M-16s open up. From the corner of my eye I saw bodies falling, but I didn’t turn to look.”



“When these two boys were shot at,” says Haeberle, “the older one fell on the little one, as if to protect him. Then the guys finished them off.”



“This man was old and trembling so that he could hardly walk. He looked like he wanted to cry. When I left him I heard two rifle shots.”



“This man and two little boys popped up from nowhere. The GIs I was with opened up, then moved in close to finish them.”



“To us they were no civilians,” said SP4 Varnado Simpson. “They were VC sympathizers. You don’t call them civilians. To us they were VC. You don’t have any alternatives. If they were VC and got away, then they could turn around and kill you.”



Haeberle found these bodies on a road leading from the village. “Most were women and babies. It looked as if they tried to get away.”



Haeberle remembers that the body in front of a burning house kept twitching and that one GI commented, “He’s got ghosts in him.”



Intent on destroying everything that might be of use to the Vietcong, a soldier stokes a fire with the baskets used to dry rice and roots. "

The photos from above are here:
free.freespeech.org



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 12:56:09 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
American crimes against humanity

What follows are some of the details which came out in Calley’s court martial and in the Life magazine article of 1969. This is what many of “our boys” were really up to in Vietnam — in many places like My Lai. Massacres like the one at My Lai were the official policy of the CIA’s Phoenix Program. When you read about the ugly incidents below, you are seeing the true and permanent face of American foreign policy.

This cowardly, sadistic, bestial evil is not merely tolerated, it is encouraged at the highest levels of the United States Corporate Mafia Government and military. America’s political and military leaders feel that state terrorism is an essential element of U.S. foreign policy. Their mentality is exactly the same as any other mafia. If the American plutocracy had an ounce of human morality they would never permit such evil and they would vigorously prosecute perpetrators of past crimes. But they choose to make excuses for them instead — because behind their pious public masks America’s rulers are every bit as evil and inhuman as the soldiers of Charlie Company.

At one point Haeberle focused his camera on a little boy about five feet away, but before he could get his picture American soldiers blew the little boy away with their M-16s. The force of the bullets’ impact was so great that the boy’s body flew backwards through the air for several feet before crumpling to the ground where he died.

Haeberle angered some GIs when he tried to photograph them as they fondled the breasts of a fifteen-year-old Vietnamese girl — before they raped and murdered her.

Testimony at Calley’s court martial revealed that the first victim was an old man whom American soldiers stabbed in the back with a bayonet. Then a middle-aged man was picked up, thrown down a well, and American soldiers lobbed a grenade in after him.

A group of fifteen to twenty mostly older women were gathered around a Buddhist temple, kneeling and praying. American soldiers executed them all with shots to the back of their heads.

Eighty people were dragged from their homes and herded to the plaza area. Many cried out “No VC! No VC!” Calley told soldier Paul Meadlo, “You know what I want you to do with them.” When Calley returned ten minutes later and found the Vietnamese people still alive in the plaza he said to Meadlo, “Haven’t you got rid of them yet? I want them dead! Waste ’em!”

Meadlo and Calley then began firing into the group from a distance of ten to fifteen feet. A few people survived because they were covered by the bodies of those who died.

“We huddled ’em up. We made them squat down... I poured four clips into the dinks...the mothers kept hugging their children...we kept on firing...”

— Paul Meadlo
United States Army



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 12:57:15 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
The drainage ditch

Another major slaughter location was a large, water-filled drainage ditch on the east side of the village. Led by Lt. Calley, the American soldiers marched a group of 70 to 80 women, children and babies to the ditch.

Calley ordered the dozen or so platoon members there to push the people into the ditch, and three or four GIs did. The people were ordered to kneel in the muddy water as the American soldiers set up their machine guns.

For some reason the people were then ordered to stand up again. But now the American troops were able to see their victims’ faces. Unable to look the women and children in the eyes, the American soldiers ordered them to turn around and kneel in the mud again. Calley ordered his men to shoot into the ditch. Some refused, others obeyed. The American soldiers opened up with their machine guns and slaughtered all the helpless people.

One who followed Calley’s order was Paul Meadlo, who estimated that he killed about twenty-five civilian people. Calley joined in the massacre. At one point, a two-year-old child who somehow survived the gunfire began running towards the hamlet. Calley grabbed the tiny child, threw him back into the muddy ditch, then shot him dead at point-blank range.



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 12:57:54 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
“Lunch break, boys!”

By 11 A.M. the sadistic orgy of mass murder was nearly over and Capt. Medina called for a lunch break. There was almost nobody left to point an M-16 at and all that raping and slaughtering had worked up a healthy appetite in the hale and hearty young American GIs.

As the dead and dying people lay in the bloody ditch, Lt. Calley decided it was time to sit down and reward himself with a can of peaches. But the dying people were disturbing his lunch. Bodies were twitching, dying women and children were moaning in the bloody water.

As he enjoyed the peaches, Lt. Calley ordered a young African-American private sitting nearby to finish off the dying people to shut them up. The private refused. Calley told him if he didn’t obey orders he’d be finished off too.

The private pointed his gun at Calley and said:

“Well I guess we’re both going to die then!”
Calley backed off. Presumably he didn’t enjoy the rest of his peaches.



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 12:59:11 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
A few human Americans at My Lai [1]

A chopper pilot, Chief Warrant Officer Hugh Thompson and his crew were the only other soldiers who had the guts to stand up to the filthy homicidal psychopaths of the United States Army at My Lai.

Thompson’s mission was to fly above the troops and draw enemy fire so the Viet Cong could be located and murdered. (The VC had this funny idea that they had a right to defend their own country against the murdering, raping American invaders.) But there were no Viet Cong at My Lai that day. Only women, old men, children and babies.

When Thompson and his crew saw what was happening on the ground, they couldn’t believe it at first. Then they were sickened. Then they became enraged. Thompson said some very, very evil stuff was going on down there. They repeatedly saw young boys and girls being shot at point-blank range. As often happened in Vietnam, they saw American soldiers sodomizing and raping girls and women before murdering them.

Thompson and his crew saw some women and children hiding in a bunker. Some American soldiers from both Charlie and Bravo Companies were approaching them. Thompson figured the women and children had about 15 seconds to live. He told his crew they were going to save those people and his crew was totally with him. He landed his chopper in a field between the American soldiers and the women and children.

Thompson got out of his chopper and approached the soldiers, saying “Hey, there’s some civilians over here in this bunker. Can you get them out?”

One of the soldiers said: “Well, we’re gonna get them out with a hand grenade.”

Thompson then warned the soldiers that his crew was ready to open up on them if they tried to murder the women and children. The soldiers backed off. Thompson says he noticed that some of them actually looked relieved. (I would say his heroism made it possible for them to avoid their own evil cowardice. Just this once.)

There were too many women and children for Thompson’s chopper to get them all out in one trip. He knew that whoever he left behind would be raped and murdered by the American soldiers. He called on the radio to another helicopter gunship requesting it to help him get the terrified people to safety. Fortunately the other pilot agreed. Thompson kept the people around him for protection while the gunship made two trips to get all the people. They were flown about 10 miles away to relative safety.

At one point Thompson was flying over the ditch where all the women and children were dying. He, or one of his crew saw that a little boy among them was still alive. He landed his chopper and his machine-gunner Larry Colburn dashed out and waded into the ditch. He had to wade through and over all the dead bodies. Arms of dying people reached out to him, begging for help. But he figured they were too far gone and the boy had a chance to live.

Larry carried the little boy back to the chopper and they flew to a hospital/orphanage and delivered him to relative safety. Thompson says that hospitals in Vietnam were usually combined with orphanages.

Thanks to America, land of the free and home of the brave, there were a lot of orphanages in Vietnam.


The information in the above rescue story, as well as the earlier anecdotes about Lt. Calley and his peaches, and Capt. Medina shooting the girl, were given in a talk by Hugh Thompson on September 28, 2000 at Humboldt State University in Arcata, California.

It was a very good and heart-felt presentation, but Thompson said one thing which indirectly supports U.S. military-government damage-control propaganda that My Lai was an “isolated incident”. Somebody asked him if there were other such massacres, and he said only that it was so horrible that if he thought it had happened in many other places he was afraid he might “lose it”. However the fact that such brutal massacres were actually the routine policy of the U.S. Army is testified to by a great many ex-soldiers, John Kerry and platoon-leader Jim Linnen being well-known examples. Thompson must be perfectly aware of this. He said he was employed in some kind of program to help Vietnam vets. If that program is funded by the U.S. government it would explain why he would feel pressured to support the blatant lie which was first promoted by President “Tricky Dick” Nixon, that My Lai was an “isolated incident”. [Back]

See also the book:
Forgotten Hero of Mylai: The Hugh Thompson Story



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 1:00:07 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
Aftermath

If not for the determined efforts of Ronald Ridenhour, a twenty-two-year-old ex-GI from Phoenix, the world would never have found out about the horrors that occurred on March 16, 1968 at My Lai 4. Physically courageous though they were, Hugh Thompson and his crew would have kept it to themselves, like the babykillers of Charlie Company and most other Vietnam vets. At least Thompson and his crew refused to lie for the stinking Army once the story was out, but they didn’t make any effort on their own to publicize it until many years later.

Ridenhour served in a reconnaissance unit in Duc Pho, where he heard five eyewitness accounts of the My Lai massacre. He began his own investigation, traveling to Americal headquarters to confirm that Charlie Company had in fact been in My Lai on the date reported by his witnesses. Ridenhour was shocked by what he learned.

When he was discharged in December, 1968, Ridenhour said “I wanted to get those people. I wanted to reveal what they did. My God, when I first came home, I would tell my friends about this and cry — literally cry.”

In March, 1969, Ridenhour composed a letter detailing what he had heard about the My Lai massacre and naively sent it to President Nixon, the Pentagon, the State Department, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and numerous members of Congress. Most recipients either ignored it or put him on their hit list.

As fate would have it, however, there happened to be a few Representatives who had a human conscience. You can almost always count on all 100 U.S. Senators to be the abject whores of the corporate/banking plutocracy. Most U.S. Representatives are likewise whores. But occasionally there are a few U.S. Representatives who actually have a basic human morality. Representative Morris Udall was one of these, and he aggressively pushed for a full investigation of Ridenhour’s allegations.

When President “Tricky Dick” Nixon heard about it he launched his typical deceit campaign, trying to downplay the horrors at My Lai as an unfortunate aberration, “an isolated incident”.

But to this day, the Vietnamese people themselves testify that there were many, many My Lais. Even American soldiers admit there were many My Lais.

By November, 1969, the American public was finally beginning to learn the details of what happened at My Lai 4. The massacre was the cover story in both Time and Newsweek. CBS ran a Mike Wallace interview with Paul Meadlo. Seymour Hersh published in-depth accounts based on his own extensive interviews. Life magazine published Haeberle’s graphic photographs.

Meanwhile the U.S. Army’s Criminal Investigation Division dragged on with its separate investigation. It kept delaying until most of the enlisted men who had raped and murdered young girls and blew little children away with M-16s had received their “honorable” discharges from the military. Thus they were immune from prosecution by court-martial.

(Isn’t that convenient? The U.S. Army’s “Criminal Investigation Division” is criminal indeed. And speaking of war criminals, the unelected Bush regime’s Secretary of State, Colin Powell, was a major player in the attempted cover-up of the My Lai massacre. That’s why the slimebag was rewarded with a stellar career in the U.S. Army, presiding over yet more war crimes in Iraq in 1991, then later rising high in the U.S. government. The more evil and corrupt you are, the higher you rise in the U.S. military and government.)

Decisions were made to prosecute a total of twenty-five officers and enlisted men, including General Koster, Colonel Oran Henderson and Captain Medina. In the end, however, only a few would be tried. And only one, William Calley, would be found guilty.

Note:
This has become the standard M.O. of the U.S. Army when its crimes against humanity are revealed to the public. Damage control consists of sacrificing just one soldier to make the crime look like an isolated incident. All the rest get away with it.

It’s very similar to the case of the American KFOR soldiers in Kosovo who gang-raped, tortured, sodomized and then murdered an eleven-year-old Albanian girl. Only the ringleader (based at Fort Bragg, N.C.) finally pled guilty. The rest got away with it.
See crash.to for more information.



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 1:01:37 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
"Medina goes free

Captain Ernest Medina was charged with murdering 102 Vietnamese civilian people.

To save his sorry ass, the Army got the infamous attorney F. Lee Bailey for his defense. The flamboyant Bailey conducted his usual highly successful defense, impressing the gullible jury and manipulating the law to protect his criminal client. He forced the prosecution to drop key witnesses and kept damaging evidence, such as Ronald Haeberle’s photographs, from being seen by the jury. After fifty-seven minutes of “deliberation”, the jury acquitted Medina on all charges.

Months later, when a perjury prosecution was no longer possible, Medina admitted that he had suppressed evidence and lied to the brigade commander about the number of civilian people murdered at My Lai 4.

Calley found guilty... and set free

The strongest case was that against Lt. William Calley, however. On November 12, 1970, in a small courthouse in Fort Benning, Georgia, young Prosecutor Aubrey Daniel stood to deliver his opening statement: “I want you to know My Lai 4. I will try to put you there.”


Baby-faced baby killer
lies to the press
(as strategically-placed
mother-figure
looks on approvingly)
Lt. Calley said he felt like he was merely killing “animals” when he murdered Vietnamese women and babies. Besides, like the Nazis, and Israeli soldiers, he was “just following orders”. Orders given by Capt. Medina, to be exact. So to save himself, Capt. Medina stabbed his Lieutenant in the back and swore that he gave no orders to murder women and children.

In March 1971, after thirteen days of deliberations, the longest in U.S. court-martial history, the jury returned its verdict: Calley was guilty of premeditated murder on all specifications.

After hearing pleas on the issue of punishment, jury head Colonel Clifford Ford pronounced Calley’s sentence: “To be confined at hard labor for the length of your natural life; to be dismissed from the service; to forfeit all pay and allowances.”

Calley spent exactly 3 days in jail.

President “Tricky Dick” Nixon, feeling sympathy for a fellow criminal, ordered Calley removed from the stockade and placed in the more comfortable circumstance of house arrest.

Crooked judges then granted the great American war hero several sentence reductions. Finally, on November 9, 1974 the Secretary of the Army announced that Calley would be paroled. And today, as with Capt. Medina and all the other babykilling, girl-raping soldiers of the United States Army, William Calley is walking around loose, a free man in America.

In 1976, Calley married. Presumably his wife was assured that their own babies would be too White for him to blow away with an M-16. As of this writing, he works in the jewelry store of his father-in-law in Columbus, Georgia.

And to this day, a great many sick, psychopathic Americans regard Lt. William “Babykiller” Calley as a hero.

That, folks, is what passes for “justice” in the satanic United States of America — the world’s number-one perpetrator of state terrorism."



To: Sully- who wrote (66411)11/7/2004 1:03:15 AM
From: Proud Deplorable  Respond to of 89467
 
Bob Kerry, CIA War Crimes, And The Need For A War Crimes Trial
by Douglas Valentine
counterpunch.com

“By now everybody knows that former Senator Bob Kerrey led a seven-member team of Navy SEALS into Thanh Phong village in February 1969, and murdered in cold blood more than a dozen women and children.

“What hardly anyone knows, and what no one in the press is talking about (although many of them know), is that Kerrey was on a CIA mission, and its specific purpose was to kill those women and children. It was illegal, premeditated mass murder and it was a war crime.

“And it’s time to hold the CIA responsible. It’s time for a war crimes tribunal to examine the CIA’s illegal activities during and since the Vietnam War.”

Bob Kerry:
the Life and Times of a Throat-Slitter
by Richard Gibson
counterpunch.org

“Further outside the imperial gaze, even today, is the heroism of the Vietnamese, not only those who Kerrey and many other US officers caught up in the genocidal invasion sought to exterminate, but those who defeated the empire, politically, militarily, and morally, causing imperial troops to run away in their helicopters, pushing their allies off the struts as they ran.”

Robert Kerrey and the bloody legacy of Vietnam
by Patrick Martin and David North
wsws.org

“Former US Senator Robert Kerrey, newly inaugurated as the president of the New School University, one of the most prestigious positions in American academia, has admitted participating in a death squad attack on a Vietnamese village [Thanh Phong] 32 years ago, in which he and six soldiers under his command killed 21 women, children and elderly men.

“In the course of the nighttime assault, the American raiders [U.S. Navy SEALS] killed every Vietnamese they encountered — men, women, children. They used every weapon in their arsenal, from knives to rifles and grenades to light anti-tank weapons, expending more than 1,200 rounds of ammunition on a village where only a few dozen people lived.

“...the SEALS slit the throats of an elderly man, his wife and three grandchildren in the first hut they encountered when they entered the village. The graves of these five victims, marked with a common date of death, can be seen in the village today.”

See also:

What is at stake in the fight to remove Robert Kerrey?
wsws.org