All governments need enemies. How else to justify their
existence?
Edward Abbey. A Voice Crying in the Wilderness. 1989
Edward Abbey. A Voice Crying in the Wilderness. 1989
America has become ‘the most lawless country in the civilized
world,’ a panorama of murders, perversions, a terrific ungoverned strength,
excusable only because of the horrid beauty of its machines. To-day it is a
generation of gross know-nothingism, of blackened churches were hymns groan
like chants from stupefied jungles, a generation universally eager to barter
permanent values (the hope of an aristorcracy) in return for opportunist
material advantages, a generation hating those whom it obeys.
William Carlos Williams. In The American Grain. 1933
William Carlos Williams. In The American Grain. 1933
The history of the United States shows that in spite of the varying
trend of the foreign policy of succeeding administrations, this Government has
interposed or intervened in the affairs of other states with remarkable
regularity, and it may be anticipated that the same general procedure will be
followed in the future. It is well that the United States may be prepared for
any emergency which may occur…
U.S. Marine Corps. Small Wars Manual. 1940
U.S. Marine Corps. Small Wars Manual. 1940
These conflicts might as well be called ‘imperial wars’ – a
term that, American sensitivities notwithstanding, seems apt to describe many
U.S. adventures abroad. Indeed, having set out to write a purely military
history, I found myself of necessity also chronicling the political course of
American empire.
Max Boot. The Savage Wars of Pelace. Small Wars and the Rise of American Power. 2002
Max Boot. The Savage Wars of Pelace. Small Wars and the Rise of American Power. 2002
The second in command, now left in charge of the camp, was a
man of gigantic size called ‘Judge’ Holden of Texas. Who or what he was no one
knew but a colder blooded villain never went unhung: he stood six foot six in his mocassins, had a large fleshy frame, a dull tallow colored face destitute
of hair and all expression. His desires was blood and women, and terrible
stories were circulated in camp of horrid crimes committed by him when bearing
another name, in the Cherokee nation and Texas; and before we left Frontreras
a little girl of ten years was found in the chapperal, foully violated and
murdered. The mark of a huge hand on her little throat pointed him out as the
ravisher as no other man had such a hand, but though all suspected, no one
charged him with the crime.
Samuel E. Chamberlain. My Confession. 1956
Samuel E. Chamberlain. My Confession. 1956
At the Winter Soldier Investigation in Detroit
organized by Vietnam Veterans Against the War
January 31-February 2, 1971, veterans including First Lieutenant William
Crandell of the 199th Light Infantry Brigade, Americal Division
expressed their outrage:
We intend to tell who it
was that gave us those orders; that created that policy; that set that standard
of war bordering on full and final genocide. We intend to demonstrate that My
Lai was no unusual occurrence, other than, perhaps, the number of victims
killed all in one place, all at one time, all by one platoon of us. We intend
to show that the policies of Americal Division which
inevitably resulted in My Lai were the policies of other Army and Marine
Divisions as well. We intend to show that war crimes in Vietnam did not start
in March 1968, or in the village of Son My or with one Lieutenant William
Calley. We intend to indict those really responsible for My Lai, for Vietnam,
for attempted genocide… On August 19, 2009, while speaking to the Kiwanis Club of Greater Columbus, Calley apologized for his
role in the My Lai massacre. Calley said:
There is not a day that goes by that
I do not feel remorse for what happened that day in My Lai. I feel remorse for
the Vietnamese who were killed, for their families, for the American soldiers
involved and their families. I am very sorry... If you are asking why I did not
stand up to them when I was given the orders, I will have to say that I was a
2nd Lieutenant getting orders from my commander and I followed them—foolishly,
I guess.
Het land fungeerde… decennialang als ordebewaker en
politieagent – om maar te zwijgen van alle hulp die het uitdeelde. En nog
steeds zijn de Verenigde Staten het anker van het hele Atlantische deel van de
wereld in de ruimste zin van het woord. Het is nog altijd de ‘standaardmacht’
Geert Mak. Reizen zonder John. Op zoek naar Amerika. 2012
Geert Mak. Reizen zonder John. Op zoek naar Amerika. 2012
Gen. William C. Westmoreland’s characterization of civilian
casualties: ‘It does deprive the enemy of the population, doesn’t it?’ We
evaluated our progress by bodycounts and drew free-fire zones in which the
entire civilian population was created as the enemy. Such a strategy inevitably
led to war crimes. Thus My Lai was not a minor event, unworthy of inclusion in
a nation’s history, but was important precisely because it was emblematic of
much of what went wrong with the
entire war in Vietnam. My Lai was the most famous instance of what John Kerry, formerly of Vietnam Veterans Against the
War, now a U.S. senator (en de huidige Amerikaanse minister van
Buitenlandse Zaken. svh), called ‘not
isolated incidents but crimes committed
on a day-to-day basis with the full awareness of officers at all levels of
command.’ Appearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in April
1971, Kerry said, ‘Over 150 honorably discharged and many very highly decorated
veterans testified to war crimes committed in Southeast Asia.’ He went on to
retell how American troops ‘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
fashion reminiscent of Genghis Kahn, shot cattle and dogs for fun, poisend food
stocks, and generally ravaged the countryside of Vietnam.’ All this was ‘in addition
to the normal ravage of war.’
James W. Loewen. Lies My Teacher Told Me. Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong. 1995
James W. Loewen. Lies My Teacher Told Me. Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong. 1995
In reading the Abu Ghraib articles
Seymour Hersh wrote for the New Yorker
in May (here,
here,
and here),
what struck me about the revelations of abuse and torture was the similarity in
detail to what I experienced in Vietnam 35 years ago. The one major difference
has been the media’s willingness to embrace in 2004 a story that they shunned
in 1970, when returning veterans attempted to inform the American public of
widespread atrocities, including the routine killing and torture of prisoners,
committed by American forces in Southeast Asia.
Only certain episodes of the
widespread Vietnam veteran war protests throughout 1970 and into 1971 are
well-known, like the April 1971 veterans' encampment in Washington. Scores of
former combatants – with John Kerry in a visible position of leadership – threw
their service ribbons and medals of valor over a barrier in the direction of
the Capitol steps. But one has to dig far deeper to recover and stitch into a
coherent narrative an account of the precise issue – U.S. war crimes in
Indochina – that motivated much of Vietnam veteran antiwar activism in those
times. With the exception of the My Lai massacre – made public in the U.S.
under Seymour Hersh’s byline more than a year and a half (November 1969) after
it had occurred (March 1968) – Vietnam war crimes, which often included
torture, never attained the level of media validation and public recognition
afforded to the events at Abu Ghraib.
Michael Uhl. Vietnam's Shadow Over Abu Ghraib. 2004
Michael Uhl. Vietnam's Shadow Over Abu Ghraib. 2004
The U.S. military first
denied that it has used white phosphorus as an
anti-personnel weapon in Fallujah, but later retracted that denial, and
admitted to using the incendiary in the city as an offensive weapon. Reports
following the events of November 2004 have alleged war crimes, human rights abuses, and a massacre by
U.S. personnel. This point of view is presented in the 2005 documentary film, Fallujah,
The Hidden Massacre…. The primary theme of the film is
its assertion of a case for war crimes committed by the United States in its
military offensive against Fallujah in Iraq. The film documents the use of
weapons based on white phosphorus and other substances
similar to napalm, such
as Mark-77, by
American forces.
Interviews with American
ex-military personnel who claimed to have been involved in the Fallujah
offensive back up the case for the use of weapons by the United States, while
reporters who were stationed in Iraq discuss the American government's attempts
to suppress the news by covert means… On 17 May 2011, AFP reported that 21
bodies, in black body-bags
marked with letters and numbers in Latin script had been recovered from a
mass grave in al-Maadhidi cemetery in the center of the city. Fallujah police
chief Brigadier General Mahmud al-Essawi said that they had been blindfolded,
their legs had been tied and they had suffered gunshot wounds. The Mayor, Adnan
Husseini said that the manner of their killing, as well as the body bags,
indicated that US forces had been responsible. Both al-Essawi and Husseini
agreed that the dead had been killed in 2004. The US Military declined to
comment.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fallujah,_The_Hidden_Massacre http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fallujah
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fallujah,_The_Hidden_Massacre http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fallujah
Wanneer de westerse mainstream met grote stelligheid beweert dat de VS als ‘ordebewaker en politieagent’ in de wereld ‘fungeert,’ dan wordt bewust de Amerikaanse terreur met evenveel stellligheid verzwegen. De wreedheden, onderdrukking en uitbuiting passen niet in de Readers Digest-versie waarbij een ‘politieagent’ kennelijk geen ‘ordebewaker’ behoeft te zijn, gezien het onderscheid. Duidelijk is in elk geval dat die ‘orde’ de belangen van de rijken dient, of in de woorden van de opsteller van de Amerikaanse Grondwet en de vierde president van het land, James Madison, ‘They ought to be so constituted as to protect the minority of the opulent against the majority’ van paupers. Op die wijze ontstond een racistische plutocratie waarbij, zo schreef de Amerikaanse hoogleraar Engels, Mark Richardson, een werkelijk
integrated America will necessarily be a different America because
what it means to be ‘American’ has until now involved a complementary blend of
social opppression and psychic repression. This is what Baldwin has in mind
when he writes, in No Name in the Street: ‘In the generality, as social and
moral and political and sexual entities, white Americans are probably the
sickest and most dangerous people, of any color, to be found in the world today.’
[…] He writes in The Fire Next Time: ‘The white man’s unadmitted – and
apparently, to him, unspeakable – private fears and longings are projected onto
the Negro. The only way he can be released from the Negro’s tyrannical power
over him is to consent, in effect, to become black himself, to become a part of
that suffering and dancing country that he now watches wistfully from the
heights of his lonely power and, armed with spiritual traveler’s checks.’
Het feit dat iets meer dan een kwart van de Amerikaanse
kiesgerechtigden op een president heeft gestemd die een zwarte vader en een
blanke moeder heeft, maakt aan dat racisme geen eind, gezien ook het feit dat
de meerderheid van de blanke kiezers niet voor hem heeft gestemd en een
aanzienlijk deel van de gekleurde bevolking in de VS nog steeds tot de
onderkaste behoort. ‘The racial wealth gap has hit an
all-time high while Barack Obama has
been president. The median net worth of white households is now 20 times that
of black households.’
http://www.forbes.com/sites/forbesleadershipforum/2012/12/10/how-home-ownership-keeps-blacks-poorer-than-whites/
http://www.forbes.com/sites/forbesleadershipforum/2012/12/10/how-home-ownership-keeps-blacks-poorer-than-whites/
Paul McKinley, an outspoken Chicago
resident and voice against liberal-Chicago-machine politics, Rahm Emanuel, and
President Obama, spoke to me directly about the ongoing violence in the black
community, explaining, “the real cause of violence in the community is caused
by narco-terrorism facilitated by Chicago’s liberal-sanctuary-city status, in
addition to the historically high unemployment rate among black men between of
working age,” which he claims is never addressed by the President and comes
last, if at all, in the liberal agenda.
McKinley points to a Univiersity
of Wisconsin Milwaukee ‘Race and Male Employment in the Wake of the Great
Recession’ study, which found that for the 40-year time span between 1970 and
2010 the employment rate of black males between 16-64 years old has fallen by
28% to 55% in the country’s 25 largest metropolitan areas. Over these 40 years,
he claims his community, the ‘poor-black community,’ has been controlled and
devastated by black Democrats implementing a ‘white-liberal agenda.’ He
specifically points to the President’s policy of putting issues such as
same-sex marriage and amnesty for illegal aliens in front of the struggling
black community and curbing violence.
http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2012/10/26/Exodus-Inter-City-Blacks-Fleeing-Obama-Democrats
http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2012/10/26/Exodus-Inter-City-Blacks-Fleeing-Obama-Democrats
the wholesome American dream that the father-child Sal has (één
van de hoofrolspelers in On the Road. svh),
with its prairies, stars, sparklers, and nighttime Iowa blessings, is just the
impossible dream of On the Road: its wild utopia, the joyous America that
exists nowhere beyond the border of this fiction, but where... White and Black alike, at last find their happy, true-hearted, ecstatic
place together in this world. On the Road sings its White readers to sleep
dreaming of this world elsewhere: the place where America has the only reality
it has in fact ever had. We have always dwelt merely in possibility, as migrant
farm laborers in California, though not in On the Road, know full well. On the
Road is therefore a novel steeped in forgetfulness, an Apollonian dream
willfully set against a whole world of torment. It tells us a bedtime story
about the power of our supreme national fiction to inspire belief, the better
to bring into view its never-realized but always possible object, just over
the western horizon. We simply have to keep telling ourselves that America can
exist, as Baldwin knew when he wrote The Fire Next Time. ‘We the black and the
white, deeply need each other here if we are really to become a nation – if we
are really, that is, to achieve our identity, our maturity, as men and women.’
Zolang de ‘Amerikaanse Droom’ een illusie
blijft is het absurd te veronderstellen dat de VS die Droom wereldwijd wil of kan verspreiden. De mainstream mag dan wel, zoals Mak, een ‘geheime liefde’
koesteren voor het ‘droomland,’ verstandige mensen dienen daarentegen niet uit te
gaan van een droom, maar van de werkelijkheid. En een ‘geheime liefde’ is het
jargon van een puber die nog geen plaats heeft gevonden voor de harde realiteit.
In The Anarchy of Empire schreef de Amerikaanse hoogleraar Engels, Amy Kaplan:
American exceptionalism is in part an argument for boundless
expansion, where national particularism and international universalism
converge. The cultural expressions I analyze reveal an anxiety about the
anarchic potential of imperial distension underlying this exceptionalist ideal.
If the fantasy of American imperialism aspires to a borderless world where it
finds its own reflection everywhere, then the fruition of this dream shatters
the coherence of national identity, as the boudaries that distinguish it from
the outside world promise to collapse.
Op de een of andere
manier zullen de westerse mainstream-opiniemakers ooit eens moeten reageren op
deze paradox. Als de claim van het Westen klopt dat de waarden van de
Verlichting universeel zijn en wij dus gedwongen zijn de mensenrechten, de
democratie, en het internationaal recht overal te respecteren dan hebben het
nationalisme en patriottisme geen legitimering meer en zullen we onze grenzen dienen open te stellen
voor de armen uit de derde wereld, ons streven naar hegemonie moeten stoppen, onze welvaart moeten afbouwen en delen met de rest van de wereld. Men kan niet eerst beweren de normen en waarden van mensenrechten en
democratie te respecteren om vervolgens de schending van diezelfde normen te
accepteren. En mocht de lezer zich afvragen waarover ik het heb dan wijs ik ondermeer
op de Europese steun aan de illegale inval in Irak, de Europese steun bij het
martelen van mensen die door de VS verdacht werden van terrorisme en op het
feit dat de EU nog steeds Israel financieel, economisch, politiek, cultureel en
zelfs via de NAVO militair steunt, ondanks het feit dat de ‘Joodse staat’
doorgaat met het schenden van het internationaal recht. ‘UN REPORT: ISRAEL MUST IMMEDIATELY DISMANTLE
SETTLEMENTS OR FACE ICC’ http://stanvanhoucke.blogspot.nl/2013/02/zionist-terror-105.html
Morgen meer.
Morgen meer.
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ND: "Leidinggevenden binnen de luchtmacht zeggen dat de Verenigde Staten al over genoeg drones beschikken om toekomstige oorlogen uit te vechten."
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