In the struggle for our
future,
there are two kinds of
people in America:
Those who see military
spending as an expense,
and those who see military
spending as an income.
...We all know who's
winning – yes, America's military/industrial complex – who
receive more “defense”
money than the next 10 countries combined. American taxpayers
have been reduced to part-time slaves to pay for an oppressive police
state and a military “empire” – that essentially goes to war
for multi-national corporations. (We are definitely not
getting our money's worth of freedom.)
Moreover, in the long run;
everyone loses when our infrastructure suffers, our
scientists don't have the resources to help us adapt, and our natural
resources get depleted rapidly. (Think about it; nobody wants to live
in an apocalyptic world where all we have left are
guns.)
We can blame this huge
waste of resources on our corrupt government and our auction style
elections, but there's more to it.
Recently, House Minority
Leader Nancy Pelosi admitted that Congress
is afraid of the CIA.
Recently, Senator Dianne
FeinStein revealed that the
CIA is spying on the Senate.
And the only rational
explanation for (political transparency) candidate Obama's
transformation to (staunch spy supporter) President Obama – is that
he too, is afraid of (or even blackmailed by) spies for the
military/industrial complex.
This isn't the first time
an American President has had to deal with a rouge
military/industrial complex. In fact, this has gone back as far as
President John F. Kennedy.
...On more than one
occasion President JFK voiced his fear, to numerous people, that he
feared a coup.
...And then, something
that looked very much like a coup happened.
What was that? Didn't John
McCain call the JFK assassination an “intervention?” "Intervention" sounds like an Orwellian term for “coup.” No wonder most of
us continue to doubt the magic bullet theory.
But no matter who pulled
the trigger(s) to kill President Kennedy, the war mongers regained
control – and they got their Cold War – and their Viet Nam.
...Warriors got to be
heroes, military contractors got
to keep their jobs, and a few merchants of death got even richer.
I highly recommend Robert F. Kennedy Jr's recent article JFK vs. The War Machine.
Now, compare that to the
Rolling Stone article Obama vs. The Hawks.
Some things never change.
Positions of power attract
the power hungry.
The power hungry tend to
be aggressive for power.
Tyrants are by definition
aggressive, power hungry people.
Consequently, systems with
concentrated positions of power typically
creep towards tyranny and wars.
How do we prevent this?
With democracy.
And since American
democracy hasn't been preventing tyranny creep, we need more direct
democracy.
Fortunately, direct
democracy might not be that hard to accomplish indirectly. Just vote
for the candidates who promise to make decisions solely reflecting
popular opinion.
2 comments:
""there are two kinds of people in America:
Those who see military spending as an expense,
and those who see military spending as an income""
I will remember the above quote. I think it is true that the Military and their close cousins, Law Enforcement, have turned into an industry, where the bottom line is the paycheck and the reason they do anything at all anymore is for the money.
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