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Obama's Narrative of Deceits Print
Saturday, 10 January 2015 09:34

Hirthler writes: "Though President Obama promised “transparency” and “openness,” he has slipped so far from those goals that some wonder how many sides of his mouth he can speak through."

President Obama has been accused of selective storytelling in describing U.S. foreign policy.  (photo: The Guardian)
President Obama has been accused of selective storytelling in describing U.S. foreign policy. (photo: The Guardian)


Obama's Narrative of Deceits

By Jason Hirthler, Consortium News

10 January 15

 

hough President Obama promised “transparency” and “openness,” he has slipped so far from those goals that some wonder how many sides of his mouth he can speak through. He has surely not broken from the longstanding pattern of presidential deceits that have eroded the Republic, as Jason Hirthler writes.

If the American public knew what was being perpetrated in its name, it might put an end to the slow-motion coup d’état of the United States by corporate wealth. But it is kept in the shadows, pinioned by a harness of half-truths that underwrite its ignorance and enable its indifference.

The public will likely remain in this state until it hears the whole truth, and not the abridged version peddled by an unscrupulous administration, its Pavlovian Cabinet, our obsequious Congress, and the sycophant media (those dutiful court stenographers of state power). Until this confederacy of knaves is exposed at scale, the Janus-faced narrative streaming from the lips of the Commander-in-Chief — whomever he or she may be — will neither change nor falter. Ringing in a New Year will not matter.

Let’s take a look at a few of the key storylines in foreign policy. Note how each is fundamentally incomplete. Key facts are elided. Context is erased. Ulterior motives buried. American action is thus cast in the lambent light of good intentions. From the administration’s standpoint, the fundamental goal of selective storytelling is to portray offensive acts of aggression as defensive acts of nobility, the backbone of the myth of American exceptionalism.

Defending Ukrainian Sovereignty

Perhaps the story of the year in 2014 was Ukraine. President Barack Obama has roamed the world declaiming on the sacred rights of our dear Ukrainian friends in Kiev. As Obama has it, these freedom-loving patriots have suffered multiple injustices this past year: When their former Crimean province endured the indignity of annexation by the Russian bear. When they were forced to bravely face down a savage uprising in the East — where Moscow infected the people with failed ideas and false hopes.

These poor Kiev allies, who overturned a corrupt government and instilled the leaders it wanted, still hopes in the humblest of terms to integrate with Europe. We must stand beside it, support its dreams, and defend its fledgling liberty from those who would usurp it.

Most of this is fog-addled dissembling from the estimable firm of Balder and Dash, recently retained by the White House. But a few facts persist. There was a coup — but America facilitated it. A new government did take office — but it was comprised not of democrats but fascist sympathizers and neoliberal technocrats. There was an uprising in the East — but it was led by ethnic Russians who rejected the Kiev putsch. There was a plebiscite — in which Crimeans overwhelming opted to join the Russian Federation rather than sign up for ECB-style austerity and a phalanx of NATO bases.

Notice how Obama’s version casts the conflict as a defensive one. It employs the threadbare rationale that America is the noble enforcer of democratic values the world over. Here it is defending defenseless borderland Slavs from unquenchable imperialist thirst of Moscow. In truth, Russia has always indicated that interventions in its border states would be considered provocations, just as the U.S. nearly went nuclear when the Soviets deployed missiles in Cuba.

Despite promises from the first Bush administration, successive administrations have moved shamelessly to the east, absorbing new states into NATO and slowly working to marginalize Russian influence from its eastern border to the Atlantic. An aggressive posture if there ever was one.

Iran and the Persian Threat

The President has told us that the “international community” has made tremendous progress in eliminating Iran’s capacity to “breakout” and “sprint” to a nuclear weapon, as it most assuredly hopes to do in its endless quest for apocalypse. But while he warns that nations with honest intentions must be wary of scheming nations, the supporting evidence for the madness of the mullahs is sketchy and ignores Tehran’s IAEA right to pursue civilian nuclear energy.

But the President won’t mention the Ayatollah’s fatwa against nuclear devices. Nor will he remind you that our dangerous sanctions — notoriously killing 500,000 Iraqi children in the 1990s — have significantly damaged the Iranian medical industry and restricted healthcare for the gravely ill.

He might tell you — quite rightly — how naïve Iranian President Hassan Rouhani was to think that making nuclear concessions, softening Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s provocative language, and glad-handing a few dignitaries would make the slightest difference to the U.S. perception of Tehran. But he won’t ask you any hypotheticals either, such as how you might feel were you watching a hyper-nuclear aggressor run roughshod over your largely defenseless neighbors? If the U.S. really believes Iran is chasing a nuke, then why not quit giving them a reason to?

ISIS and the Long War

President Obama quite rightly expressed his contempt for ISIS and their unconscionable acts of decapitation of captives and discriminatory slaughter of Shiites. The revolting behavior of ISIS is plain to see. But the President will not summon the image of our own allies, Wahhabi autocrats that savagely behead their own for the sin of sorcery and other fiendish behaviors.

What Obama will also not do is move to end the brutal actions of the U.S. military. He does not mention the drone strikes that slaughter suspected plotters and their families, drawing diabolical schemes in the dirt behind their village hovels. The evidence against them, mind you, is buried in clandestine bureaucratic enclaves — unfit for untrained eyes. And still, village Arabs are nothing more than illuminated targets on a heat map.

Obama will not mention our own sordid history of malevolence. For instance, what we backed in Central America throughout the presidency of his political hero, Ronald Reagan, including brutality through our proxy forces in Nicaragua and El Salvador, which the Council on Hemispheric Affairs (COHA) found to be unique in the hemisphere because they “abducted, killed, and tortured political opponents on a systematic and widespread basis.” Torture techniques were said to have been learnt at American counter-insurgency schools and overseen by the CIA. And yes, these atrocities included decapitations.

If you’re looking for evidence that American troops performed these deeds themselves, look no further than Iraq. Or into the annals of American history. During the Wilson administration, for example, marines invaded the Dominican Republic and leading a criminal and savage repression in order to secure a profitable market for U.S. sugar concerns. At the time, the advantages of outsourcing were little known.

False Flags and a Paranoid Pyongyang

The President will publicly affect a grandiose outrage and claim that invidious rogue state North Korea has hacked Sony Corporation and leaked millions of files, an act of war under international law. What kind of barbaric society would think to conduct such outlandish cyber attacks on a harmless corporation, our flabbergasted White House spokesmen and press flacks ask us in disbelief?

But what our great leader will not tell you is that we have no firm evidence that North Korea is behind the attack. Much like the United States affected certainty when assessing the Damascus chemical attack in 2013, the degree of certainty rises in inverse proportion to the paucity of proof. The FBI released a bantamweight statement suggesting codes, IP addresses, and other surface indictors pointed to North Korea. These claims have been met with derision by those familiar with digital hacking.

Nor has the President bothered to note that his administration has largely pioneered the art of the cyber-attack by smuggling sinister viruses into the Iranian grid hoping to infect and destroy its nuclear capacities and undermine its feverish obsession with a bomb (again, sans evidence). This is not to mention the heroic efforts of the National Security Agency to hack into and imbed trackers in millions of domestic computers.

A Tortured Exception

At all times, the President poses as a man who cherishes justice, peace, and the sovereignty of nations. He will tell you as much. He claims Iraq was a “strategic blunder”; he plaintively concedes that “we tortured some folks” and behaved in a manner not in keeping with “who we really are.”

But perhaps the best way to prevent future torture is first, to quit practicing it, and second, to punish those that did it in the past, even if they are members of your own clan. Neither has been comprehensively achieved.

The President claims to have banned torture. But he hasn’t banned the practice of outsourcing it via rendition. And he has evidently only banned it for the interrogation of prisoners (“detainees”) captured in “armed conflict,” which leaves a broad loophole concerning noncombatant detainees.

As for the authors of our elaborate torture of Arabs across the Muslim world in infamous Bagram and Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo and in anonymous black sites where the gloves truly come off, well, let’s put that behind us. He has also decided that to prosecute the war crimes of administrations past would simply be unhelpful, and that we ought to look forward and not into the (unhelpful) past.

Yet his elegies to lawfulness include his steadfast defense of CIA Director John Brennan, who himself had the audacity to defend CIA war crimes before the press from Langley, in which he repeatedly claimed — once more without evidence — that torture works. Not surprising from a CIA director. But Obama will always take a more nuanced view, insisting that these minor missteps are not in keeping with “our values.”

Turning a Blind Eye to Tel Aviv

Whenever an exchange of fire occurs between Palestine and Israel, Obama is swift to commandeer the nearest microphone, only to remind us that Israel has a right to defend itself. This is not only a prejudiced view, but it isn’t actually true. Under international law, occupying powers don’t have the right to attack the populations they occupy, let alone to collectively punish them for the crimes of their leadership, which in this case are resistance to occupation.

Obama will also forget to mention that the Palestinian occupied territories represent the world’s most salient example of persistent state terror. He will instead authorize yet more money and munitions and gunships to be quietly shipped to Tel Aviv, trumpeting Israeli democracy. Before the ink dries on these forms of Israeli welfare, the President will reject U.N. resolutions that acknowledge Palestinians’ right to be free. To live unoccupied. To escape the grinding gears of racism that have transformed Israel into the South Africa of its day, a nation purblind to its own fascism.

The Energy Subtext

Of course, Obama has never acknowledged that the rise of ISIS, Iranian fundamentalism, Palestinian oppression, and North Korean isolationism are partially creditable to U.S. policies and interventions. We exacerbate the things we claim to deplore. We commit the behaviors we hope to curtail. The reason why is the nasty little secret at the heart of the American empire: the profits of the few trump the prosperity of the many.

The fact is that Russia, Syria and Iran are the West’s three great nemeses in the contest for control of the earth’s resources. All three have variously conspired to build pipelines across their nations and others — such as Ukraine — that lead to Europe, where these Slav and Shiite alliances hope to supply oil and gas to the lucrative EU market. But this cannot happen.

This is the silent meta-narrative lurking beneath Obama’s patriotic vagaries — that these are proactive resource wars. Pipeline conflict that will benefit defense contractors (Raytheon) and energy companies (Exxon). They are also wars over market access through “free trade” agreements that will privilege Western industry (agribusiness) and finance (IMF).

Victory in these conflicts will keep America’s dollar hegemony intact, forcing energy purchases to be denominated in dollars, which will be used to buy U.S. debt and thus help fund the next energy conflict. But these delicate facts are left out of the final draft of the President’s talking points. Nobody in the government believes Americans would back wars perpetrated for control of fossil fuels, guaranteed markets for GMO seeds, and globalized serfdom via compound-interest debt regimes.

Paul Wolfowitz, while a senior Pentagon official, made it plain enough in his 1992 defense policy paper for the first Bush administration: in the post-Soviet world America would permit no rivals to materialize on any front, the better to achieve “full spectrum superiority,” that dreamy Elysium that sends chills down the spines of the habitués of the Bilderberg Group. Military superiority as a guarantor of market dominance and profit optimization. Simple as that.

As William Hartung, Director for the Center for International Policy, has said, “War is good business for those in the business of war.” If these are the businesses that put candidates in the White House, does it not stand to reason that administration policy reflect their interests? Energy conflicts obviously do.

By lining the Eastern front with NATO troops and the peripheries of the Persian Gulf with U.S. bases; and by controlling all government concessions in Kiev and Damascus, the United States can ensure that no Slavic Islamic pipelines will cross either nation, and that Europe will be nearly severed from its umbilical dependence on Russian energy.

But this is not part of the story. Our dutiful press assures us that Vlad the Conqueror now rabidly seeks regional hegemony and unchecked sway over befuddled but peaceable Europeans. Again we are forced into the fray.

Promoting the Ideal, Demoting the Reality

In his book The Purpose of American Politics, author and authority on the realist school of foreign policy Hans Morgenthau claimed America had “a transcendent purpose to uphold equality and freedom.” As Noam Chomsky has said, Morgenthau believed that to deny the validity of our national purpose was to “confound the abuse of reality with reality itself.” Thus the ideal is more real than the reality of history. It seems President Obama is of the same mind as Morgenthau.

It is time someone informed our arch idealist that values are distilled from actions, not homilies. In the arena of action, we are an empire created by genocide, built on slavery, and maintained by violence.

As Abraham Lincoln once said, America is “a nation dedicated to a proposition,” that all men are created equal. But the wattage of that lovely conceit has dimmed with time. If there is anything exceptional about America, it is the abyss that yawns between the eloquent phrases of the Constitution and the barbaric actions that defy its every word.

Maybe our values were once noble, and perhaps those of the average American still are, but the government has long veered off on a path of its own, its habitués corrupted by the clichés of power, empowering cronies for all manner of criminality. For peace, they’ve substituted violence. For transparency, intrigue. For economic equality, lawful pillage. For consensus, conclave. For participation, exclusion. For representation, a price tag.

Our flight path may once have aimed at popular rule, but that was a long time ago.

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FOCUS | This Fix Is (Almost) In on the Keystone XL Pipeline Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=11104"><span class="small">Charles Pierce, Esquire</span></a>   
Friday, 09 January 2015 13:45

Pierce writes: "On Friday, the Nebraska Supreme Court torched one of the fig-leafs concealing the president's real position on our old friend, the Keystone XL pipeline, the continent spanning death-funnel designed to bring the world's dirtiest fossil fuel down through our country's most arable farmlands from the environmental hell spout of northern Alberta to the refineries on the Gulf Coast, and thence to the world."

Aerial views of Alberta Tar Sands mines. (photo: Veronqiue de Viguerie/Getty)
Aerial views of Alberta Tar Sands mines. (photo: Veronqiue de Viguerie/Getty)


ALSO SEE: Nebraska Supreme Court Clears Way for Keystone XL Pipeline

This Fix Is (Almost) In on the Keystone XL Pipeline

By Charles Pierce, Esquire

09 January 15

 

n Friday, the Nebraska Supreme Court torched one of the fig-leafs concealing the president's real position on our old friend, the Keystone XL pipeline, the continent spanning death-funnel designed to bring the world's dirtiest fossil fuel down through our country's most arable farmlands from the environmental hell spout of northern Alberta to the refineries on the Gulf Coast, and thence to the world. It reversed a lower court ruling regarding the law that was used to re-route the death funnel. The decision, it should be said, was subject to a procedural rule of the Nebraska courts, the majority of the justices having lined up behind the people fighting the death funnel.

In a 4-3 split ruling, the high court vacated the lower court ruling and upheld the constitutionality of the law used to route the oil pipeline in Nebraska. Four of the judges sided with landowners who brought the lawsuit, but a super-majority of five judges is required to declare a law unconstitutional.

The only thing left is the State Department review, which can now resume after having been suspended pending a ruling by the Nebraska court. If the State Department recommends the project, which I think it will, the president then will have the final decision on the pipeline, one way or the other. (Pay no attention to the kabuki bill that's going to come out of the new Congress.) It's getting very close to nut-cutting time on this issue. The way you know that is that people in support of the project are scaling the heights of dudgeon, and it is not only Republicans who are making the ascent. Senator Joe Manchin (D-Bituminous) fit himself with a lovely hissy yesterday on the topic of the president's possible veto of the Death Funnel Appreciation Act of 2015 that will be sent to his desk.

"I would have thought the president would say, ‘Listen, being a former legislator, I'm going to wait until this process unfolds. And at the end of the day, I'll tell you, do I like what they came up with, or do I not like what they came out with, and this is my reason for veto,' " Manchin said. "[He] never even gave it a chance, never even gave it a chance. Now, that's just not the way you do legislation. It's not the way a democracy works. And it's not the way the ... three branches of government should work."

Here with a response is Mr. J. Madison of Orange, Virginia.

Article I; Section 7: All Bills for raising Revenue shall originate in the House of Representatives; but the Senate may propose or concur with Amendments as on other Bills. Every Bill which shall have passed the House of Representatives and the Senate, shall, before it become a Law, be presented to the President of the United States; If he approve he shall sign it, but if not he shall return it, with his Objections to that House in which it shall have originated, who shall enter the Objections at large on their Journal, and proceed to reconsider it. If after such Reconsideration two thirds of that House shall agree to pass the Bill, it shall be sent, together with the Objections, to the other House, by which it shall likewise be reconsidered, and if approved by two thirds of that House, it shall become a Law. But in all such Cases the Votes of both Houses shall be determined by yeas and Nays, and the Names of the Persons voting for and against the Bill shall be entered on the Journal of each House respectively. If any Bill shall not be returned by the President within ten Days (Sundays excepted) after it shall have been presented to him, the Same shall be a Law, in like Manner as if he had signed it, unless the Congress by their Adjournment prevent its Return, in which Case it shall not be a Law. Every Order, Resolution, or Vote to which the Concurrence of the Senate and House of Representatives may be necessary (except on a question of Adjournment) shall be presented to the President of the United States; and before the Same shall take Effect, shall be approved by him, or being disapproved by him, shall be repassed by two thirds of the Senate and House of Representatives, according to the Rules and Limitations prescribed in the Case of a Bill.

And then there's Washington Post fact-checker Glenn Kessler, bestower of Pinocchios, whose job it is to make sure that political debate doesn't wake the nation from its nappy-nap. He is willing to admit that the "42,000 jobs" argument is something of a barefaced non-fact, but he also points out that, because Both Sides Do It, the opposition to the pipeline likely is overstating its environmental damage. Two Pinocchios apiece! Journalism!

Except that his assessment of what constitutes environmental damage is incredibly limited, not to say almost completely fanciful.

Oil sands extraction certainly has higher levels of greenhouse emissions than other sources of crude, but the State Department concluded the impact of building the pipeline would be minimal; the material is going to be extracted anyway. Critics of the project say the State Department report is already outdated, given the decrease in oil prices, but the impact on production remains unclear. While the pipeline might offer some cost advantage over rail, if the price of oil keeps dropping, the incentive to mine oil sands will diminish as well.

Let Kessler go up to the hell spout on northern Alberta if he wants to see the environmental damage done by the excavation of tar-sands even before they get sent down the death funnel. The first leak in the death funnel -- and it will leak, because pipelines leak and because the people who build them generally don't give a damn if they do -- will be catastrophic. The very fact of tar-sands production is an environmental disaster. Kessler also glibly ignores the very real opposition in Canada to the other pipelines he mentions, one to British Columbia and the other one to the east, an opposition that is strong enough that the Keystone project has become the priority that it has become. Nevertheless, the decision is going to come down to whether or not the president approves this project. He has kept his options open, but the Nebraska Supreme Court sank one of his lifeboats today.

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What Presidents Obama and Bush Have in Common With the Charlie Hebdo Shooters Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=7118"><span class="small">Carl Gibson, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Thursday, 08 January 2015 16:59

Gibson writes: "Here's a question for everyone tweeting mournful thoughts on the #JeSuisCharlie hashtag: Whenever scores of innocent civilians are killed in U.S. airstrikes, do you tweet #WeArePakistan or #WeAreSyria? If the answer is no, that should give you pause. Ask yourself why you're compelled to feel for white victims of terror, but don't bother to tell your friends on social media about your sadness over the deaths of the thousands of nameless Middle Eastern civilians that the U.S. government has caused."

A journalist's bloody camera in the aftermath of the Palestine Hotel bombing in Baghdad, 2003. (photo: Patrick Baz/AFP/Getty Images)
A journalist's bloody camera in the aftermath of the Palestine Hotel bombing in Baghdad, 2003. (photo: Patrick Baz/AFP/Getty Images)


ALSO SEE: Drone Rules in Afghanistan Go Unchanged, and Other
Reasons the War Isn't Really Over

ALSO SEE: US-Led Forces Drop Nearly 5,000 Bombs on IS Group

What Presidents Obama and Bush Have in Common With the Charlie Hebdo Shooters

By Carl Gibson, Reader Supported News

08 January 15

 

ere’s a question for everyone tweeting mournful thoughts with the #JeSuisCharlie hashtag: Whenever scores of innocent civilians are killed in U.S. airstrikes, do you tweet #WeArePakistan or #WeAreSyria? If the answer is no, that should give you pause. Ask yourself why you’re compelled to feel for white victims of terror, but don’t bother to tell your friends on social media about your sadness over the deaths of the thousands of nameless Middle Eastern civilians that the U.S. government has caused.

Yes, the attack on the Charlie Hebdo office that resulted in 12 dead Europeans was a tragedy. But it was no more of a tragedy than the recent U.S. airstrikes in Syria, which our own government has admitted killed innocent civilians. It’s no more of a tragedy than civilians being killed by U.S. drone strikes, which have killed 2,400 people since 2010 and claimed the lives of 168 to 200 children in Pakistan alone. It’s no more of a tragedy than the 85 Americans who die every day as a result of gun violence. And it’s no more of a tragedy than the 22 U.S. veterans who kill themselves every day because of the scars that perpetrating violent U.S. foreign policy leaves on their bodies, minds, and hearts. We should question why there’s such inconsistency between how American media saturates us with coverage of the deaths of 12 French satirists, yet relegates innocent victims of imperialist foreign policy to obscurity.

The men who killed the Charlie Hebdo writers over satirical cartoons are suspected to be radical Muslims and are widely renounced as terrorists. Yet, President Obama has bombed seven predominantly Muslim nations – Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia, Libya, Syria, and Iraq – in his six years as president, and he was given a Nobel Peace Prize. Just like the Charlie Hebdo attackers, President Obama kills extrajudicially, administering collective punishment for the actions of a few. And just like the radical jihadis who carried out the attack in France, President Obama has legions of delusional followers who back him every step of the way, despite the senseless violence of his actions. Let’s face it: The only reason Obama is so loved by so many despite his policies and the Charlie Hebdo attackers are so vilified is because of the color of their victims.

But President Obama is simply carrying out the wishes of the empire he speaks for, just as President George W. Bush did during his 8 years. In 2004, President Bush expressed an interest in bombing Al Jazeera’s headquarters in Qatar, one of the few allies the U.S. has in the region. The only thing that stopped Bush from carrying out an attack that would have killed far more journalists than the Charlie Hebdo attackers did was a memo from Tony Blair urging him not to. Before that, the Bush administration oversaw a missile strike on Al Jazeera’s Baghdad office during the 2003 invasion of Iraq that killed a reporter. And the infamous “Collateral Murder” video that Bradley (now Chelsea) Manning leaked in 2006 shows U.S. gunships killing a Reuters journalist with a .30 caliber machine gun, along with the people who rushed to help him as he was bleeding in the street.

This outpouring of sorrow over the French journalists killed for drawing cartoons is especially worrisome in Europe, which has seen an uptick of anti-Muslim demonstrations in recent months. Just as it would be ignorant for Muslims to say that Christianity is violent because Obama, a Christian president, bombs Muslim countries, it’s ignorant for Christians to say that all Muslims are violent because a miniscule number of them commit acts of terrorism. Yet despite this, anti-Muslim marches are becoming a regular occurrence in Germany. A recent poll showed a whopping 1 in 8 Germans would join an anti-Muslim march in their neighborhood. And the Golden Dawn party in Greece, which has a sizable presence in parliament and whose symbol eerily resembles a swastika, openly embraces a platform encouraging violence against immigrants – particularly Muslims. The sorrowful media coverage of the 12 dead Charlie Hebdo writers will only stoke more irrational hatred of Muslims in Europe.

If Americans want to direct anger at the killers of the French journalists, they need only look at their own government. The wave of fundamentalist Islam that is destabilizing the Middle East is due almost exclusively to our meddling in Middle Eastern affairs. President Eisenhower authorized the CIA-sponsored overthrow of Mohammed Mossadegh, Iran’s democratically-elected leader in 1953, which led to the brutal rule of the Shah and the subsequent revolution that put the Ayatollahs in power. The CIA helped Saddam Hussein’s Ba’ath Party seize power in Iraq in the 1960s after Hussein’s two previous coup attempts failed. President Reagan armed the Taliban in Afghanistan to fight the Soviet Union in the 1980s. And in 2012, President Obama armed Syrian extremists to overthrow Bashar al-Assad, which one former CIA operator has said led to the creation of ISIS. The men who killed the Charlie Hebdo writers might never have taken such action if not for American foreign policy that creates perpetual war and destabilization – the perfect breeding ground for radical Islamic thought.

We Americans live under a violent government that desensitizes us to its brutality overseas with clever propaganda. Is it any coincidence that the #1 movie in America right now is Clint Eastwood’s “American Sniper” – a film about a man who singlehandedly killed 150 people in Muslim countries during American wars of aggression? One of the most talked-about movies near the end of 2014 was “The Interview,” which was essentially a comedic version of the U.S. government’s fantasy of regime change in North Korea. It seems that everywhere we look, American media and culture encourages us to cheer for Americans as we oppress and brutalize countries around the world. Cheerleaders of George W. Bush’s Iraq War said 9/11 was an attack on our freedoms, and the loudest mourners of the Charlie Hebdo attack have adopted the George W. Bush world view, saying the attack was about press freedom.

Let’s not be fooled by the media into hating an entire group of people for one isolated attack, and let’s mourn all victims of terror equally, whether the terrorist practices Islam or is the President of the United States.



Carl Gibson, 26, is co-founder of US Uncut, a nationwide creative direct-action movement that mobilized tens of thousands of activists against corporate tax avoidance and budget cuts in the months leading up to the Occupy Wall Street movement. Carl and other US Uncut activists are featured in the documentary "We're Not Broke," which premiered at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival. He currently lives in Madison, Wisconsin. You can contact him at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , and follow him on twitter at @uncutCG.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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The Pen vs. the Gun Print
Thursday, 08 January 2015 16:57

Gourevitch writes: "We like to say - we who work with pens (or pixels) - that the pen (or pixel) is mightier than the sword. Then someone brings a sword (or Kalashnikov) to test the claim, and we're not so sure."

A woman at a gathering at the Place de la République, in Paris, honoring the victims of the terrorist attack at the offices of Charlie Hebdo. (photo: Thierry Chesnot/Getty Images)
A woman at a gathering at the Place de la République, in Paris, honoring the victims of the terrorist attack at the offices of Charlie Hebdo. (photo: Thierry Chesnot/Getty Images)


ALSO SEE: Second Deadly Shooting Rocks Paris
ALSO SEE: Major US Media Outlets Self-Censor Controversial Charlie
Hebdo Cartoons After Paris Attack

The Pen vs. the Gun

By Philip Gourevitch, The New Yorker

08 January 15

 

e like to say—we who work with pens (or pixels)—that the pen (or pixel) is mightier than the sword. Then someone brings a sword (or Kalashnikov) to test the claim, and we’re not so sure.

The French cartoonist Stéphane (Charb) Charbonnier liked to say, when jihadis repeatedly threatened to silence him, that he’d rather be dead than live on his knees or live like a rat, so he kept right on drawing and publishing his loud, lewd, provocative, blasphemous caricatures of theocratic bullies. And now he’s dead—he and nine of his colleagues at Charlie Hebdo, the satirical magazine he edited in Paris—massacred by masked gunmen, who came for them in broad daylight, shouting “Allahu Akbar,” and also killed two policemen before fleeing with a cry, “The prophet Muhammad is avenged.”

It’s hard to imagine how the Charlie Hebdo crew would have wrung a joke out of their own executions. But you can bet that they wouldn’t have shrunk from the challenge, and you can be sure that the result would have been at odds with any standard of good taste, unless you consider it in good taste never to give any ground to the dictates of holy warriors who seek power by murdering clowns.

Ideally, it would never require great courage and commitment to make puerile doodles mocking those whom one perceives to be making a mockery of the things that they purport to hold sacred. But those dead French cartoonists were braver by far than most of us in going up against the deadly foes of our civilization, armed only with a great talent for bilious ridicule. On any given day, we might have scoffed at the seeming crudeness of their jokes, rather than laughing at their jokes on crudity. But the killers proved the cartoonists’ point with ghastly finality: theirs was a necessary, freedom-sustaining, and therefore life-giving, form of defiance. Without it, they knew, we—humankind—are less.

Last night, tens of thousands in France took to the streets of their cities in solidarity with the victims of the Charlie Hebdo attack. Many carried signs, declaring “Je Suis Charlie,” a memorial slogan that had already overtaken Twitter, where the hashtag #JesuisCharlie could easily be misread as a compression of the equally apt exclamation: “Jesus, Charlie!” The spectacle of these great throngs of outraged, unbowed mourners reclaiming their public spaces was heartening. But the truth is—for better and for worse—that, no, most of us, even in the most free of Western societies, are not Charlie.

For better, because so many of us have the luxury of often feeling secure enough in our freedom to take it for granted. For worse, because in taking our freedom for granted, we are too often ready to trade it for a greater sense of security. We are not Charlie, in other words, because we risk so little for what we claim to value so much. We are not Charlie, too, because most of us are relatively inoffensive, whereas Charlie, like so many liberating pioneers of free expression—think not only of Lenny Bruce and Mad magazine but also of Gandhi and Martin Luther King—were always glad to give offense to what offended them. And we are not Charlie, today, because we are alive.

Georges Wolinski, one of the martyred Charlie Hebdo cartoonists, once said, “Humor is the shortest path between one man and another.” But a bullet is swifter. After his death, his daughter said, “Papa is gone, not Wolinski.” Meaning, rightly, that his work—his voice, and his drawings, what he wrought with his pen—is immortal. Yet the reason that some people with guns prefer to kill some people who use pens is always the same: because it is effective. Terror works. (Just ask anybody who stood to make a buck on the theatrical release of “The Interview.”)

The gun is mightier. In fact, the pen’s might depends on the might of the gun. In America, where we have the greatest degree of protection for the greatest extent of free expression of any society on earth, that freedom derives from the penmen who wrote the Constitution persuading the gunmen who defend and uphold it that this arrangement is in everyone’s best interest. It is a magnificent compact, but hardly inevitable. It has proved surprisingly solid over time, but it requires constant defense—as we are reminded by the belated emergence of the memorial slogan “Je Suis Ahmed”—after Ahmed Merabet, the Muslim policeman who was killed protecting Charlie Hebdos right to caricature his religion. So it appears that maybe, in the long run, the pen does prevail against butchery—but we live from day to day, and yesterday was a hellish day without consolation. It leaves us less sure, as Notre-Dame’s bells toll for the dead jesters, who will get the last laugh.


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FOCUS | Now Both Branches of Congress Are Run by Lunatics Print
Thursday, 08 January 2015 14:12

Galindez writes: "Well, it's a reality now, the lunatics are running both branches of Congress. Mitch McConnell has taken the gavel in the Senate. The Republican takeover of the Senate will usher in new committee chairmen expected to push a right-wing extremist agenda."

Congressional leadership? (photo: AP)
Congressional leadership? (photo: AP)


Now Both Branches of Congress Are Run by Lunatics

By Scott Galindez, Reader Supported News

08 January 15

 

ell, it’s a reality now, the lunatics are running both branches of Congress. Mitch McConnell has taken the gavel in the Senate.

The Republican takeover of the Senate will usher in new committee chairmen expected to push a right-wing extremist agenda.

Lawmakers who are expected to take the helm of major Senate committees include a number of vocal critics of the Obama administration. Senator John McCain (R-Ariz.), in line to lead the Senate Armed Services Committee, has been critical of the administration’s response to Islamic State militants and the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Likely Senate Banking chairman Richard Shelby (R-Ala.) has lambasted the Obama administration’s Dodd-Frank financial law and could push to roll back powers at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

Senator Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) is expected to take the gavel at the Senate Budget Committee. GOP control of the budget process in the Senate and House, which remains under Republican control, will give the party greater leverage in budget negotiations with President Barack Obama, particularly over the nation’s borrowing authority and government funding levels. Senator Sessions, a conservative, could use the position to lead GOP efforts to use the budget process to target the Affordable Care Act and programs like Social Security and Medicare.

Senator James Inhofe (R-Okla.), who is expected to be the next chairman of the Environment and Public Works Committee, is a climate change denier and could put pressure on the Environmental Protection Agency’s efforts to cut carbon emissions.

Similarly, Senator Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) has echoed concerns by House Republicans on the IRS’s targeting of tea-party groups and the Justice Department’s handling of the “Fast and Furious” operation involving gun-running along the Mexican border. As the expected next chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Senator Grassley could revive investigations into those matters while seeking more authority and access to inspectors general who monitor government agencies.

Senator Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.), who could chair the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions panel, has criticized the Obama administration’s frequent use of waivers from the federal No Child Left Behind Act.

Senator Bob Corker of Tennessee, in line for the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, could press the White House to take a stronger stance against Iran in ongoing nuclear-program negotiations, as well as press for a more aggressive response to Russia’s foreign policy goals.

And if all that isn’t bad enough, Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) will likely take over the Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation.

So who still thinks there is no difference between the Republicans and Democrats?


Scott Galindez attended Syracuse University, where he first became politically active. The writings of El Salvador's slain archbishop Oscar Romero and the on-campus South Africa divestment movement converted him from a Reagan supporter to an activist for Peace and Justice. Over the years he has been influenced by the likes of Philip Berrigan, William Thomas, Mitch Snyder, Don White, Lisa Fithian, and Paul Wellstone. Scott met Marc Ash while organizing counterinaugural events after George W. Bush's first stolen election. Scott will be spending a year covering the presidential election from Iowa.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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