| ||||||||||||||
|
Local News & Opinion
Ref.: Civic Events Ref.: Arts & Education Events Ref.: Public Service Notices Travel
01.13 Hawaii, the Unique State Books, Films, Arts & Education
01.24 Can Apple “Rescue” US Education? (Graphics) 01.23 What You (Really) Need to Know 01.22 How to Forecast Weather Infographic w/Simple Explanations Letters
Ref. : Letters to the editor Health Care & Environment
02.03 Obama Won't Touch Climate With a 10-Foot Pole 02.03 Komen reverses decision to cut Planned Parenthood funding 02.03 Reforming EU Deep-Sea Fisheries Management 02.02 By defunding Planned Parenthood, the Susan G Komen Foundation betrays women 02.02 Ohio Tries to Escape Fate as a Dumping Ground for Fracking Fluid 01.31 Eleanor Smeal dissects Obama vs. Catholic Church controversy over birth control coverage - video 01.30 Scientists Call on Obama Administration to Use Science as Guide for Arctic 01.28 Universal health care proposal stalls in California Senate 01.27 Apple, Electronics and Environmental Ills 01.25 Solar Cheaper Than Diesel Making India’s Mittal Believer: Energy 01.24 Sounding an Alarm on Birds and Mercury 01.24 Why Don’t We Have Abundant Solar Power? Blame Financing, and Industry, not Science 01.22 The Money Traps in U.S. Health Care 01.22 Looking Inside the Twinkie Ref. Dollars for Doctors - How Industry Money Reaches Physicians Ref. 2010 Comparative Price Report Medical and Hospital Fees by Country - Graphics Ref. Health at a Glance 2011 - OECD Indicators Ref. : Why is Healthcare Absurdly Expensive in USA (Part 2) [Graphics] (Part 1 is here) Video Health Care Systems in Less Corrupt Countries “News” Media
02.02 ABC's Iran Propaganda 02.02 The Ongoing “Foxification” of the Wall Street Journal 01.30 While temperatures rise, denialists reach lower 01.29 Fox News psychiatrist: Newt Gingrich's affairs 'mean he might make a strong president' 01.22 ‘Shocking victory’: With SOPA shelved, Markos Moulitsas on a way forward for Internet policy - video Daily The Daily Howler Justice Matters
02.03 Senate Votes To Ban Its Members From Insider Trading... Kind Of 01.31 Senate clears way for vote on insider-trading ban 01.25 Why all the robo-signing? Shedding light on the shadow banking system 01.25 In Iraq, Haditha case is reminder of justice denied 01.22 Still Not Clear on SOPA & PIPA? Infographic w/Simple Explanations US Politics, Policy & Culture
02.03 SUPERBOWL XLVI: Are You Ready for Some Football??? 02.03 Buffett rules: Sheldon Whitehouse introduces the Paying a Fair Share Act - video 02.02 Secrecy Shrouds ‘Super PAC’ Funds in Latest Filings 02.01 Rich Patrons Are Major Source of Romney’s Cash 01.31 How Newt Gingrich Crippled Congress 01.30 Corporate Rule Is Not Inevitable 01.30 Clashes in Oakland: 400 Arrests, Tear Gas, Flash-Bang Grenades 01.30 A European look at the US primaries - video 01.29 Obama’s Faux Populism Sounds Like Bill Clinton 01.25 Inside Romney’s Tax Returns: A Reading Guide 01.24 ILLUSIONS: Being Led Down the Primrose Path...??? 01.24 Science Bulletins: Whales Give Dolphins a Lift - video 01.24 THE OBAMA MEMOS 01.22 Three Takeaways From South Carolina High Crimes?
Economics, Gov't. & Business
02.03 PRIVATE INEQUITY 02.02 The New American Divide 02.02 American Airlines proposes to end all four pension plans 02.01 Economics 101 01.30 New Strategy, Old Pentagon Budget 01.30 Where Did All the Workers Go? 60 Years of Economic Change in 1 Graph 01.29 The Apple Boycott: People Are Spouting Nonsense about Chinese Manufacturing 01.29 Made in the World 01.28 Sugar daddy Adelson could save $500 million in taxes if his boy Gingrich wins - video 01.28 How Swedes and Norwegians broke the power of the ‘1 percent’ 01.27 Unemployment in Spain Rises to 22.9% 01.27 Chinese Company Continues Plan To Replace Workforce With 500,000 Robots 01.27 Details Emerge of New Financial Fraud Unit 01.27 Not all jobs are equal 01.27 The Shift from Manufacturing to Service Economy - Graphic 01.25 Billionaires Occupy Davos as 0.01% Bemoan Inequality 01.24 Germany has the economic strengths America once boasted 01.23 State Capitalism: The visible hand 01.22 How Big Money Bought Our Democracy, Corrupted Both Parties, and Set Us Up for Another Financial Crisis - video 01.22 How U.S. lost out on Apple's iPhone work International
02.03 What the Occupy movement must learn from Sundance 02.02 US plans to halt Afghan combat role early surprise Kabul 01.31 TABLE TALK 01.30 With its deadly drones, the US is fighting a coward's war 01.30 UN panel aims for 'a future worth choosing' 01.26 Iran is ready to return to nuclear talks 01.24 Reagan’s Hand in Guatemala’s Genocide We are a non-profit Internet-only newspaper publication founded in 1973. Your donation is essential to our survival.
You can also mail a check to: Baltimore News Network, Inc. P.O. Box 42581 Baltimore, MD 21284-2581 |
BIPARTISAN U.S. IMPERIALISM:Incentivizing Murder: Plan Colombia and the Bitter Fruits of EmpireThursday, 30 October 2008
The murder-for-bonuses scheme carried out by American-trained and -funded mercenary units was spawned 40 years ago by the "War on Drugs"—albeit without the slightest discernible effect on the level of drug use—and then re-escalated by the "War on Terror."
The War on Drugs meets the War on Terror, and the result, inevitably, is stone-cold murder: Colombia Killings Cast Doubt on War Against Insurgents (NYT):
This is the imposthume of much greed and graft, and of the geopolitical power games played by the bipartisan elite in Washington. Any half-sentient person has known for years that the Clinton-Bush policy of lavishing endless cash and weaponry on the right-wing death squads in Colombia -- those in uniform and out -- has incentivized the murder of countless innocent civilians. Anyone who has opposed the Colombian elite, or stood up for the poor and the working people -- even if they have nothing to do with FARC or the narco freebooters, even if, indeed, they have also opposed their depredations also -- has long been at risk of sudden "disappearance" or gruesome death; the serial execution of union organizers, going back for many years, is just one example.
"A government in Washington that validates torture" -- this is the crux of the matter. A government -- or rather, an entire political elite -- that validates torture, wars of aggression, cross-border "incursions," "black ops," a military empire of more than 700 bases all over the planet, and the slaughter of more than one million innocent lives on just one front of the "Terror War" alone, will indeed produce results like the ones we see in Colombia. It is inevitable, unavoidable -- it is precisely what the system is designed to do: put the power of life and death into the hands of brutal elites, who will in turn kowtow to Washington's political, financial, military, and ideological agendas. The Republicans do this without the slightest qualm, proudly (as we noted here earlier), frankly, without any finesse and very little pretense. The Democrats wring their hands a bit over the "excesses" and "aberrations" of the system, and employ more nuanced justifications, more rhetorical gilding. But both parties are in full agreement on the need to maintain -- and expand -- this massive militarist empire. II. And yes, it will continue under Obama. And no, the American empire is not about to collapse any time soon, despite the economic catastrophe and the murderous botching of the Iraq and Afghanistan operations. As Princeton historian Arno Mayer notes this week in CounterPunch:
Underscoring that point, Jeff Huber notes at Military.com:
But both McCain and Obama have pledged themselves to a massive enlargement of the American war machine. And they will still have vast resources to draw upon as they advance the cause of empire, as Arno notes:
Again, the point is not whether ordinary American citizens will thrive under such a system. For the most part, they will not. But their prosperity and security do not figure into the imperial power equations. They are irrelevant. (Although that's not to say that unruly temper in the herd must not be allayed from time to time, occasionally by genuine reforms that head off popular discontent, or, very often, by promises, feints, fine rhetoric and symbolic gestures evoking hope for change.) And the sad fact is, once a nation gets a taste for empire, many of its people become emotionally invested in it (not to mention financially invested). As Arno puts it:
III.
The murder-for-bonuses scheme carried out by many American-trained and American-funded units in Colombia is just one more bitter fruit of the imperial tree. It was spawned by both the "War on Terror" and its twin in corruption, militarism, lawlessness and vast, needless suffering, the "War on Drugs," launched almost 40 years ago, and still going strong -- albeit without the slightest discernible effect on the level of drug use. As I noted in a column in the Moscow Times -- back in December 2001:
And they will keep going on, even if the bright sun of "pragmatic progressivism" rises on Inauguration Day 2009. Obama has rightly cited the murder of Colombian union activists as a cause for concern, even bringing it before a national television audience in the last debate. But again, this is a matter of nuance, of technocratic tinkering within the framework of the bipartisan consensus for empire. Obama has also supported the Colombian government in its Bush-style cross-border military incursions to "fight terrorism," and back the expansion of the "Merida Initiative," a Bush-created scheme that would essentially expand "Plan Colombia" -- with the "results" detailed in the New York Times story -- throughout Latin America, as the Council on Hemispheric Affairs reports:
The Council goes on to note:
That is a chilling conclusion indeed from this very mainstream, centrist organization, when one considers the murderous abomination that was "Reagan-era area policy" in Latin America. As I noted in the Moscow Times in June 2004:
I don't believe this is the kind of "change" that most Americans are hoping for from an Obama administration. To be sure, Obama has talked about building his Latin American policies around the strengthening of civic structures, protection of human rights and nurturing the rule of law. These are good words; but then again, what American president has not claimed that his policies were designed to advance these noble pursuits? At the moment, Obama seems poised to take away with his right hand what he proffers with his left: bold words on human rights, but at the same time an extension of the murder-producing, elite-coddling "Plan Colombia" throughout the region. We've said this many times before: within the American militarist empire as it now stands, there are spaces where factional differences among the elite can produce mitigations of the system's malign effects in various ways for a substantial number of people. This is not nothing, especially if you are one of those people. I don't believe in begrudging anyone's desire for relief, however partial and imperfect that relief might be. At the same time, it is clear that Obama fully accepts the logic, the structure and the overall agenda of the imperial system -- a system which inevitably, irresistibly generates atrocities on a mass scale. Once you accept that -- and not only accept it, but even fight hard to take control of it, to make it yours -- then what won't you do? And how quickly and easily will you cast aside your mitigations if the needs of the system demand it? If you pick up a scepter still dripping with fresh blood, and wield it, will your hand not "incarnadine the multitudinous seas, making the green one red?" Chris Floyd has been a writer and editor for more than 25 years, working in the United States, Great Britain and Russia for various newspapers, magazines, the U.S. government and Oxford University. Floyd co-founded the blog Empire Burlesque, and is also chief editor of Atlantic Free Press. He can be reached at cfloyd72@gmail.com.This column is republished here with the permission of the author. Copyright © 2008 The Baltimore News Network. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Baltimore Chronicle content is expressly prohibited without their prior written consent. Baltimore News Network, Inc., sponsor of this web site, is a nonprofit organization and does not make political endorsements. The opinions expressed in stories posted on this web site are the authors' own. This story was published on October 30, 2008. |
| ||||||||||||