David Swanson
15 November 2014. Posted in News
THE
WELL-KNOWN line is that people get the governments they deserve. Of course nobody should be abused the way the
US and many other governments abuse them, no matter what their intellectual
deficiencies.
If anything,
stupid people should have better, kinder governments. But my common response to
that well-known line is to point out the bribery and gerrymandering and limited
choices and relentless propaganda. Surely the clown show in Washington is not
the people's fault. Some of my best friends are people and they often display
signs of intelligence.
But the
primary thing the US government does is wage wars, and it wages them against
other people who had no say in the matter. Of course I don't want wars waged
against Americans either, but the general impression one gets from traveling
around and speaking and answering questions at public events in the United
States is not so much that people are indifferent to the destruction of the
globe as long as they don't miss their favorite television show, as that people
are unclear on what destruction means and can't identify a globe when it's
placed in a lineup with six watermelons.
War and peace
are concepts people have heard of, but ask them which they favor and you'll get
blank stares. "Do you support all wars, some wars, or no wars?" I ask
to get a sense of the crowd, but a fourth answer takes the majority:
"Uhhh, I dunno."
A few people
want to end war by having a bunch of anti-war wars, but they all work in the
State Department and I haven't been invited to speak there.
A few elderly
people believe we simply must have wars, and every last one of them has the
identical reason: Pearl Harbor.
You can
explain to them the stupid vindictive conclusion of World War I, the decades of
militarization, of antagonization of Japan (protested for many years by US
peace activists), of Wall Street funding the Nazis.
You can point
out the madness of a rogue nation waging hundreds of disastrous wars all over
the world for 70 years and getting people to support this project by finding a
single example of a supposedly justifiable war 70 years ago.
You can
challenge them to find any other major public project that has to go back that
far to justify itself. You can quote them the wisdom of peace activists from
the 1920s and 1930s and 1940s. They'll simply say that Pearl Harbor justified
saving the Jews.
You can show
them how Pearl Harbor was intentionally provoked, how actions that might have
saved the Jews were avoided, how the Jews became a justification for the war
only long after it was over, and they'll just grunt at you.
You can
recount successful nonviolent resistance to the Nazis and the growth and
development of nonviolent resistance in the decades since, and they'll drool,
scratch their heads, or ask if you're going to vote for Hillary.
A few young
people believe we simply must have wars, and every last one of them has the
identical reason: ISIS. Because ISIS is something evil, there must be war.
"Should we attack ISIS or do nothing?" they all ask.
I imagine I'd
laugh if I weren't trembling for our future. Iraq III: The Return of the
Decider is becoming the worst parody of a humanitarian war in history. First
George W. Obama gave himself a waiver from his own dumb rules against killing
unlimited civilians. Then he asked for a special waiver in order to arm lots of
really good people who happen to torture some folks and murder some folks and
rape some folks and genocide some folks. This after he asked the CIA if arming
rebels has ever worked out, and the CIA said "No, but we do it as a matter
of principle," and he said "Let's roll!"
Just as
nobody supposes World War II the Just and Noble could have arisen without World
War I the Futile and Pointless, no serious analysis of ISIS can explain its
birth without Iraq II: The Liberation.
ISIS is made
up of people tortured in US prison camps and thrown out of the Iraqi Army by US
occupiers and driven into desperation by the hell the US and its allies
created. ISIS brutally murders just like, but on a smaller scale than, the US
and its new allies in fighting ISIS.
The
helpless-people-on-a-mountaintop story remains permanently present outside of
time for Americans, even though the US is now killing so many civilians that it
needs laws changed (or simply ignored; anyone remember the UN Charter?), even
though the story was a gross distortion at the time, and even though the
bombing protected the oil contractors in Erbil, not the mountain.
People nod
their heads and ask, "So, should we attack ISIS or do nothing?" You
can
You can
explain to them that ISIS explicitly said it wanted to be attacked.
You can show
them how ISIS is growing as a result.
You can
explain to them how hated the United States is now in that region.
You can read
them a RAND Corporation report showing that most terrorist organizations are
ended through negotiations, virtually none through war.
You can fill
them in on how 80 percent of the weapons shipped into the Middle-East, not
counting US weapons or weapons the US gives to groups like ISIS and its allies,
come from the United States.
You can
describe how the region could be demilitarized rather than further armed.
You can
discuss diplomatic possibilities, local cease-fires, aid and restitution.
You can
graphically make clear how a fraction of what's spent on bombing Iraq to fix
the disaster created by bombing Iraq could pay for transforming the whole
region into a healthier happier place to live with food, water, agriculture,
clean energy, etc.
You can
detail emergency measures that are available, including peaceworkers, aid
workers, doctors, journalists -- measures that risk fewer lives than war.
And they'll
blink their eyes and ask "So, should we attack ISIS or do nothing?"
Do you
recall, you can say, that last year the White House wanted you to support
attacking Syria, and wanted to attack the opposite side in that war? And people
said no, remember? And now they want to attack the opposite side, while arming
it, and this makes sense to you? They have no goal in mind, no plan, no
estimated end-date or price-tag or body-count, and this makes sense to you?
Well, they'll
say, it's that or do nothing.
But do you
recall the year 2006 in which everybody said they'd elected Democrats in order
to end the war, and the Democrats said they'd keep it going in order to run
against it again in 2008? At that time, in 2006, as the big marches were just
ending, having begun with the biggest marches ever on February 15, 2003, if
you'd told anyone that in 2014 the war would be over and a new president would
propose starting it up again, and nobody would protest, you'd have been laughed
at. The America of 2006 would never have stood for this for a minute, at least
not if the President were a Republican.
"Oh,"
they'll say, "I've heard of Republicans. They're the ones who like war,
right? Do you think the military is letting women participate enough?"
It happened
that while I was touring and talking, NATO claimed for something like the 89th
time this year that Russia had invaded Ukraine. If it were ever true, I asked,
would anyone believe it? The answer I got: Nobody cares.
Nobody with
the easy ability to do something about it cares. The people under the bombs
care. The world gets the wars Americans deserve.
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