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''The messengers from Hell''
The question is, "Did the attack push world affairs in the direction of the downfall of the U.S.?" The answer is a resounding yes, on three accounts.
By Gabriel Ash
YellowTimes.org Columnist (United States)
(YellowTimes.org) – On my visit to Barnes & Noble the other day, I saw a little sign informing that the store will open late on September 11. The management invited the employees to spend the morning in quiet reflection.
All over America, the bosses, from the supervisor to the frothing madman who runs the Justice Department, want us to be silent, mum, and quiet. "Take two minutes of silence," they counsel. As if we didn't have a whole year of loud, garish silence; a whole year in which nobody "respectable" dared to point out the lurid nakedness of our court-appointed emperor.
Americans fell silent when a felonious cabal decided that getting its boy into the White House was more important than maintaining even the pretense of democratic elections.
Americans remained silent while people were "disappeared" into unknown prisons by unknown courts and Big Brother expanded His tentacles; when the faint pretense of constitutional protection was cast away by a "conservative" administration and a rubber-stamping congress. Today, the government can lock people up in secret and deny them legal representation. That is the reality. And America is mostly silent.
Americans reacted with silence when American power was used to murder innocent strangers at their wedding feast. Stories of mass graves of prisoners in Afghanistan were greeted with more silence.
Silence is addictive. Silence on one issue leads to silence on another.
Do we really think the dead are honored by our silence and complicity?
Let's talk in memory of the dead. Talking is the essence of democracy. Let's take two minutes, or two hours, or as much time each of us can spare, to talk about what really happened, about why it happened, and about what it means for the future.
Let's talk about all the victims of terrorism, not just about those who happen to be Americans. And let's pay a special attention to those whose death was planned or paid for by Washington.
Let's talk about all the victims: Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Korea, Vietnam, Indonesia, Cambodia, China, the Philippines, Laos, East Timor, Greece, Turkey, Honduras, Guatemala, Ecuador, Nicaragua, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Chile, Brazil, Columbia, Panama, Haiti, Pakistan, Iran, Iraq, Palestine, Lebanon, Jordan, Algeria, Nigeria, South Africa, Rwanda, Zaire, Sudan, Somalia, New York, and Afghanistan.
There is so much we don't know about September 11, and the government seems determined that we should continue not to know. What happened to all the repeated warnings about possible terror attacks? Why didn't anybody high up pay attention? Why was the administration, in defiance of common sense, so uninterested in terror before September 11?
The most important effect of September 11 was a massive wave of denial. The denial of responsibility for allowing the attack to happen is unfortunately only the tip of the iceberg.
The denial is understandable, but it is still necessary to tell the truth: the terror attacks on the Twin Towers were successful.
We don't want to recognize that. Evil shouldn't triumph, we say. We don't want to give the perpetrators the pleasure of knowing they succeeded. But we fool only ourselves when we pretend we have a choice.
The attack on the Twin Towers was a message from Hell. It was one of the rare cases in which blaming the messengers is totally justified. They are indeed guilty of mass murder.
But once we're done with that, we must attend to the message. It isn't wise to ignore messages from Hell.
We must open the charred envelope and read the words inside; we are not the first to have received it. Sooner or later every empire gets it. It is the same message Nebuchadnezzar received on the wall of his party hall: "Mene, mene, tekel, uparsin" (Daniel 5:25).
I haven't spoken with anybody in al Qaeda. I take it from Bin Laden's pronouncements that his strategic goal was the destruction of the United States. The attack on the twin towers must be understood as a tactical move within that strategy. Obviously, the attack did not destroy the United States, nor could it. The question is, "Did the attack push world affairs in the direction of the downfall of the U.S.?" The answer is a resounding yes, on three accounts.
First, the terrorists proved to their intended audience that a clandestine band, with total commitment and a modicum of intelligence and money, can strike a hard blow at the center of American power. The proof of American vulnerability is necessary to recruit people to the dream of destroying America. That goal was achieved.
Worse, what was achieved is a recast of the American role in the world in the language of romance. To understand that, ask yourself this question, "If Bin Laden were to produce a movie in Hollywood about the attack, which American movie would that production most resemble?" My answer is Star Wars.
With no more that $30,000, the terrorist managed to kill 3,000 people, destroy two symbols of American power and cause damage of over 60 billion dollars, nullifying in the process a "defense" budget of over 300 billion dollars that was set up against them. That is exactly the message of Star Wars: the triumph of belief, nimbleness and dedication over raw power and size.
That aspect of the attack is the most potent source of American denial. In the process of committing their crimes, the terrorists appropriated American dreams and fantasies. In their religious faith, entrepreneurial spirit, dedication and can-do attitudes, the terrorists displayed much of what Americans consider heroism.
The terrorists were not heroes; they were murderers. But the language of romance can easily dress up murder with heroism. Just ask yourself how many innocent people died during the adventures of Luke Skywalker. Or notice how easily the murderous U.S. military in Vietnam was portrayed by Hollywood as heroic.
The prohibition against understanding what happened in terms that we may share with the terrorists corrupts the public discourse. Instead of looking for the fullest narrative, we focus on a single aspect of it, the victims, and upon our own pain and fears. We end up with a caricature, and not a very good or perceptive one.
It is part of the achievement of the terrorists that Americans cannot address what has happened publicly, except in baby talk. That achievement underscores the two other reasons for describing September 11 as a tactical success for the terrorists. Both result from the American reaction.
Recruiting terrorists requires tough choices and oppression. Both were provided immediately by the Bush administration in its reaction to September 11. Israel stepped up its repression of Palestinians with full U.S. support. In Afghanistan, a puppet regime has been created, and the U.S. is refusing to help it in any way beyond making it more repressive. In Pakistan, the military dictator has just given himself control over the constitution with full American support. Finally, the U.S. is preparing to attack Iraq in order to place another friendly dictator in control there. The Middle East is moving from a place of oppressive regimes supported by the U.S. to a place of oppressive regimes built and maintained by the U.S. And this happens on the background of already existing massive popular animosity towards the U.S.
Now, add to that, Bush's general disdain for the rest of humanity and his request that people choose whether they are "with us or with the terrorists." Of course, many, especially among the local elites, will choose to side with the U.S. But even their support will be tepid, tempered by resentment, a sense of growing humiliation, and the knowledge, based on past experience, that the U.S. is an untrustworthy ally. Many, however, especially among the masses, will choose against the U.S. Now recall how few people were needed to pull off September 11.
A year later, the terrorists succeeded in making the U.S. look even uglier than before. They will claim that this ugly, self-centered, and cruel America is the real America. That is not true. America is large and contains multitudes. But the longer the Bush administration is allowed to project this ugly image without any significant brakes applied by the American people, the more attractive this view will appear to the rest of the world and especially to the people of the Middle East.
The White House understood immediately the psychological dimension of September 11. The attack on Afghanistan, which in all likelihood killed more innocent people than died in the Twin Towers, was designed less to defend the U.S. than to defend the image of the U.S. as a powerful and credible force.
One of the major reasons for the coming attack of Iraq is the desire to further demoralize the Islamic fundamentalists who hope to see the U.S. crumble. The administration reasons that a successful display of military determination and might will undo the effect of September 11. In particular, it will erase the image of the U.S. as a vulnerable "paper tiger."
It may well be that Bin Laden underestimated the ferocity of the U.S. reaction. Whether he is dead or alive, it is not true however that that reaction is achieving its goal.
The problem is the belief that the success of the terrorist attacks was merely psychological.
That is not the case. The terrorist attack succeeded because it exposed a real American vulnerability.
In the global village, it pays to be nice. Even a small disaffected group can inflict a debilitating wound on the greatest power. Unfortunately, the U.S. has been abusing and bullying other nations since World War II. Playing nice requires compromise from the Washington elite, and they don't like to compromise.
Furthermore, in religious fanaticism, America finds an enemy with an eternally long breath. Demoralizing such an enemy requires more than military success; it requires the ability to project oneself as the image of the inevitable future. Empires are able to project themselves into the future only so long as they offer hope of integration and peace. The U.S. has lost that power in the last few decades by a dodged commitment to a foreign policy of total hypocrisy and unenlightened self-interest. An attack upon Iraq, or even on a dozen other countries, will not change that. On the contrary, the unfettered use of military power is a sign of weakness and will be interpreted as such.
The huge U.S. military budget, which consumes more than half of every tax dollar we pay, is not giving Americans much security. Again, to the contrary, by emboldening the Washington elite to bully other nations, it reduces security. What this military budget does is harm U.S. society by reducing spending on America's real and growing social ills.
The attempt to patch U.S. credibility by increasing the defense budget, transforming the U.S. into a close, fortified society, and by going for the attack, is guaranteed to increase our vulnerability. It requires giving up the benefits of an open society and increasing the financial burden of sustaining an oversized military. Islamic fanatics are going to correctly identify the new level of military overextension as another nail in the coffin of American power. They are not going to be demoralized. They are going to be elated.
The attack on the Twin Towers was a message from Hell. If America is to avoid a much more painful collapse, we must accept September 11 as a true defeat for those who believed the use of American power abroad has no consequences.
It isn't a defeat for the vast majority of Americans. It is a defeat for the small minority in Washington who see lording over the world as their God given right. We must restrain this minority, else they bring America down with their power craze.
YellowTimes.org Columnist (United States)
(YellowTimes.org) – On my visit to Barnes & Noble the other day, I saw a little sign informing that the store will open late on September 11. The management invited the employees to spend the morning in quiet reflection.
All over America, the bosses, from the supervisor to the frothing madman who runs the Justice Department, want us to be silent, mum, and quiet. "Take two minutes of silence," they counsel. As if we didn't have a whole year of loud, garish silence; a whole year in which nobody "respectable" dared to point out the lurid nakedness of our court-appointed emperor.
Americans fell silent when a felonious cabal decided that getting its boy into the White House was more important than maintaining even the pretense of democratic elections.
Americans remained silent while people were "disappeared" into unknown prisons by unknown courts and Big Brother expanded His tentacles; when the faint pretense of constitutional protection was cast away by a "conservative" administration and a rubber-stamping congress. Today, the government can lock people up in secret and deny them legal representation. That is the reality. And America is mostly silent.
Americans reacted with silence when American power was used to murder innocent strangers at their wedding feast. Stories of mass graves of prisoners in Afghanistan were greeted with more silence.
Silence is addictive. Silence on one issue leads to silence on another.
Do we really think the dead are honored by our silence and complicity?
Let's talk in memory of the dead. Talking is the essence of democracy. Let's take two minutes, or two hours, or as much time each of us can spare, to talk about what really happened, about why it happened, and about what it means for the future.
Let's talk about all the victims of terrorism, not just about those who happen to be Americans. And let's pay a special attention to those whose death was planned or paid for by Washington.
Let's talk about all the victims: Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Korea, Vietnam, Indonesia, Cambodia, China, the Philippines, Laos, East Timor, Greece, Turkey, Honduras, Guatemala, Ecuador, Nicaragua, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Chile, Brazil, Columbia, Panama, Haiti, Pakistan, Iran, Iraq, Palestine, Lebanon, Jordan, Algeria, Nigeria, South Africa, Rwanda, Zaire, Sudan, Somalia, New York, and Afghanistan.
There is so much we don't know about September 11, and the government seems determined that we should continue not to know. What happened to all the repeated warnings about possible terror attacks? Why didn't anybody high up pay attention? Why was the administration, in defiance of common sense, so uninterested in terror before September 11?
The most important effect of September 11 was a massive wave of denial. The denial of responsibility for allowing the attack to happen is unfortunately only the tip of the iceberg.
The denial is understandable, but it is still necessary to tell the truth: the terror attacks on the Twin Towers were successful.
We don't want to recognize that. Evil shouldn't triumph, we say. We don't want to give the perpetrators the pleasure of knowing they succeeded. But we fool only ourselves when we pretend we have a choice.
The attack on the Twin Towers was a message from Hell. It was one of the rare cases in which blaming the messengers is totally justified. They are indeed guilty of mass murder.
But once we're done with that, we must attend to the message. It isn't wise to ignore messages from Hell.
We must open the charred envelope and read the words inside; we are not the first to have received it. Sooner or later every empire gets it. It is the same message Nebuchadnezzar received on the wall of his party hall: "Mene, mene, tekel, uparsin" (Daniel 5:25).
I haven't spoken with anybody in al Qaeda. I take it from Bin Laden's pronouncements that his strategic goal was the destruction of the United States. The attack on the twin towers must be understood as a tactical move within that strategy. Obviously, the attack did not destroy the United States, nor could it. The question is, "Did the attack push world affairs in the direction of the downfall of the U.S.?" The answer is a resounding yes, on three accounts.
First, the terrorists proved to their intended audience that a clandestine band, with total commitment and a modicum of intelligence and money, can strike a hard blow at the center of American power. The proof of American vulnerability is necessary to recruit people to the dream of destroying America. That goal was achieved.
Worse, what was achieved is a recast of the American role in the world in the language of romance. To understand that, ask yourself this question, "If Bin Laden were to produce a movie in Hollywood about the attack, which American movie would that production most resemble?" My answer is Star Wars.
With no more that $30,000, the terrorist managed to kill 3,000 people, destroy two symbols of American power and cause damage of over 60 billion dollars, nullifying in the process a "defense" budget of over 300 billion dollars that was set up against them. That is exactly the message of Star Wars: the triumph of belief, nimbleness and dedication over raw power and size.
That aspect of the attack is the most potent source of American denial. In the process of committing their crimes, the terrorists appropriated American dreams and fantasies. In their religious faith, entrepreneurial spirit, dedication and can-do attitudes, the terrorists displayed much of what Americans consider heroism.
The terrorists were not heroes; they were murderers. But the language of romance can easily dress up murder with heroism. Just ask yourself how many innocent people died during the adventures of Luke Skywalker. Or notice how easily the murderous U.S. military in Vietnam was portrayed by Hollywood as heroic.
The prohibition against understanding what happened in terms that we may share with the terrorists corrupts the public discourse. Instead of looking for the fullest narrative, we focus on a single aspect of it, the victims, and upon our own pain and fears. We end up with a caricature, and not a very good or perceptive one.
It is part of the achievement of the terrorists that Americans cannot address what has happened publicly, except in baby talk. That achievement underscores the two other reasons for describing September 11 as a tactical success for the terrorists. Both result from the American reaction.
Recruiting terrorists requires tough choices and oppression. Both were provided immediately by the Bush administration in its reaction to September 11. Israel stepped up its repression of Palestinians with full U.S. support. In Afghanistan, a puppet regime has been created, and the U.S. is refusing to help it in any way beyond making it more repressive. In Pakistan, the military dictator has just given himself control over the constitution with full American support. Finally, the U.S. is preparing to attack Iraq in order to place another friendly dictator in control there. The Middle East is moving from a place of oppressive regimes supported by the U.S. to a place of oppressive regimes built and maintained by the U.S. And this happens on the background of already existing massive popular animosity towards the U.S.
Now, add to that, Bush's general disdain for the rest of humanity and his request that people choose whether they are "with us or with the terrorists." Of course, many, especially among the local elites, will choose to side with the U.S. But even their support will be tepid, tempered by resentment, a sense of growing humiliation, and the knowledge, based on past experience, that the U.S. is an untrustworthy ally. Many, however, especially among the masses, will choose against the U.S. Now recall how few people were needed to pull off September 11.
A year later, the terrorists succeeded in making the U.S. look even uglier than before. They will claim that this ugly, self-centered, and cruel America is the real America. That is not true. America is large and contains multitudes. But the longer the Bush administration is allowed to project this ugly image without any significant brakes applied by the American people, the more attractive this view will appear to the rest of the world and especially to the people of the Middle East.
The White House understood immediately the psychological dimension of September 11. The attack on Afghanistan, which in all likelihood killed more innocent people than died in the Twin Towers, was designed less to defend the U.S. than to defend the image of the U.S. as a powerful and credible force.
One of the major reasons for the coming attack of Iraq is the desire to further demoralize the Islamic fundamentalists who hope to see the U.S. crumble. The administration reasons that a successful display of military determination and might will undo the effect of September 11. In particular, it will erase the image of the U.S. as a vulnerable "paper tiger."
It may well be that Bin Laden underestimated the ferocity of the U.S. reaction. Whether he is dead or alive, it is not true however that that reaction is achieving its goal.
The problem is the belief that the success of the terrorist attacks was merely psychological.
That is not the case. The terrorist attack succeeded because it exposed a real American vulnerability.
In the global village, it pays to be nice. Even a small disaffected group can inflict a debilitating wound on the greatest power. Unfortunately, the U.S. has been abusing and bullying other nations since World War II. Playing nice requires compromise from the Washington elite, and they don't like to compromise.
Furthermore, in religious fanaticism, America finds an enemy with an eternally long breath. Demoralizing such an enemy requires more than military success; it requires the ability to project oneself as the image of the inevitable future. Empires are able to project themselves into the future only so long as they offer hope of integration and peace. The U.S. has lost that power in the last few decades by a dodged commitment to a foreign policy of total hypocrisy and unenlightened self-interest. An attack upon Iraq, or even on a dozen other countries, will not change that. On the contrary, the unfettered use of military power is a sign of weakness and will be interpreted as such.
The huge U.S. military budget, which consumes more than half of every tax dollar we pay, is not giving Americans much security. Again, to the contrary, by emboldening the Washington elite to bully other nations, it reduces security. What this military budget does is harm U.S. society by reducing spending on America's real and growing social ills.
The attempt to patch U.S. credibility by increasing the defense budget, transforming the U.S. into a close, fortified society, and by going for the attack, is guaranteed to increase our vulnerability. It requires giving up the benefits of an open society and increasing the financial burden of sustaining an oversized military. Islamic fanatics are going to correctly identify the new level of military overextension as another nail in the coffin of American power. They are not going to be demoralized. They are going to be elated.
The attack on the Twin Towers was a message from Hell. If America is to avoid a much more painful collapse, we must accept September 11 as a true defeat for those who believed the use of American power abroad has no consequences.
It isn't a defeat for the vast majority of Americans. It is a defeat for the small minority in Washington who see lording over the world as their God given right. We must restrain this minority, else they bring America down with their power craze.
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We the People of America need to take control. One way is to get involved with the Clean Elections initiative.
This will make it possible for candidates to be funded by public funding ONLY, NO LOBBYISTS, NO elite, NO corporations...giving huge contributions (BRIBES) for their pet cause, be it immoral, racist, apartheid Israel, or tobacco, or nuclear energy or oil or military weapons industry. So the candidates will not be able to be bribed as is par for the course now. They will be responsible and accountable to their constituency only, we the people. It also opens up running for office for many who otherwise would not be able to afford it. This is what will make America the democracy it should be. Check it out... http://www.fairelections.us They need your help to make it happen! True FREEDOM is at stake!!!!! Maine and Arizona are already totally with the Clean Elections program and loving it!
This will make it possible for candidates to be funded by public funding ONLY, NO LOBBYISTS, NO elite, NO corporations...giving huge contributions (BRIBES) for their pet cause, be it immoral, racist, apartheid Israel, or tobacco, or nuclear energy or oil or military weapons industry. So the candidates will not be able to be bribed as is par for the course now. They will be responsible and accountable to their constituency only, we the people. It also opens up running for office for many who otherwise would not be able to afford it. This is what will make America the democracy it should be. Check it out... http://www.fairelections.us They need your help to make it happen! True FREEDOM is at stake!!!!! Maine and Arizona are already totally with the Clean Elections program and loving it!
We know the dance.
Just post some inflamatory tastless crap
like those discusting ass shots and hope that
by doing so, it will insight a divisive responce.
Anyone with working grey matter can see through
it, however revolting it may be. Kind of like watching
TV.
Just post some inflamatory tastless crap
like those discusting ass shots and hope that
by doing so, it will insight a divisive responce.
Anyone with working grey matter can see through
it, however revolting it may be. Kind of like watching
TV.
I don't think the Trade center flew around and blew up planets.If you want to belive the America is like the Galactic Empire in "Star Wars" then go ahead,but Afganistan has been liberated from the Taliban and there is nothing that you can say that will demonize it.
http://www.sfbg.com/nessie/bio.html
The Nessie Files
• extra
Sept. 27, 1999
People with imaginary enemies whom they believe to be real are called
paranoids. People with real enemies whom they believe to be imaginary are
called victims. It is often difficult to tell which is which until it is
too late and sometimes even then.
Some people call me paranoid because I am a conspiracy theorist. In this
world today anybody who's not paranoid isn't paying enough attention.
Theory develops best from practice, and from observation. I have studied
conspiracy in the library, in the lab, and in the field. As the French
say, you never look under the bed unless you've hidden there yourself. I'm
certainly no coincidence theorist. Those guys couldn't outwit a box of
rocks. Listen up guys. This ain't rocket science. Once is happenstance.
Twice is coincidence. Three times is enemy action.
I prefer to think of myself not as a theorist of any kind, but as an
observant and analytical, independent researcher. Think of me as a sort of
unlicensed private investigator. I'm really a historian. I specialize in
secret history, particularly recent secret history. I had intended at one
point in my life to teach history for a living and began attending a small
state teachers college near my hometown. The Vietnam War intervened. I
began organizing against it early. I helped organize the first mass
demonstration against the war. The "Levitation of the Pentagon," in
October of 1967, drew a quarter of a million people to Washington. Six
weeks later I was arrested along with 28 others on a totally bogus drug
charge.
Years later I learned that this was part of a mass "dirty trick" campaign
waged by the FBI against the antiwar movement and the civil rights
movement, and especially against anybody working to unite the two against
our common enemies. The program was called COINTELPRO. It was run by a
father and son FBI agent team, Richard Held, Sr. and Richard Held, Jr.
They were wildly successful. My career as a teacher was ruined. No one
with my record can ever teach school. I got off easy. I attribute this to
luck of the draw. I was born white. Fred Hampton never did anything I
didn't do, and they shot him through the damn wall.
Some sheep are more equal than others. Gary Larson says that the sheep
that give us steel wool have no natural enemies. Don't believe it.
Everybody has enemies, even sheep. Especially sheep. In a very real real
sense, sheep are their own worst enemies. But yes, sheep have enemies.
Even paranoids have enemies. Even you have enemies. There are more of them
than you think, a lot more. Hell, you have enemies you never even heard
of. Really, you do. Just because you never heard of them before doesn't
mean they don't exist. They exist, all right. With proper technique or a
bit of assistance they can be observed. Even the best camouflage reveals
something to the educated eye. Their camouflage is excellent. They are
dressed in sheep's clothing. They blend right in. If only they were
imaginary, what a relief that would be. But, oh well. They are plotting
behind your back, even at this very moment, conspiring as it were, and not
in your best interest, nor in mine. That gives us something both crucial
and precious in common.
Conspiracy is as natural as breathing. Everyone does it, everyone. When we
spell rather than use words in front of our young children, we are
conspiring. When we agree to distract mommy so our siblings can raid the
cookie jar, we are conspiring.
When we imagine that the powers that be are somehow "above all that," we
are sadly deluded. That's how they came to power. To them, we are
livestock, nothing more. The ruling class, the so-called "elite," are
pastoralists by trade. They herd us. They fleece us. They sell us. They
rustle us. They breed us. They experiment on us without our knowledge or
consent. They slaughter us at will. They own us and they own our land.
That's how it is. That's how it's going to be, at least for as long as we
play along. Husbandry it's a verb. Look it up. Then look up cull.
Politics! It's enough to gag a maggot.
When I look far enough to the right or the left, I see the same damn
thing. A bunch of guys with guns wanna tell me how to fuck, which drugs to
take, and when to show up for work. The center, sheep in bondage, bleat
along.
Agree? Disagree? I’m at nessie [at] sfbg.com.
The Nessie Files
• extra
Sept. 27, 1999
People with imaginary enemies whom they believe to be real are called
paranoids. People with real enemies whom they believe to be imaginary are
called victims. It is often difficult to tell which is which until it is
too late and sometimes even then.
Some people call me paranoid because I am a conspiracy theorist. In this
world today anybody who's not paranoid isn't paying enough attention.
Theory develops best from practice, and from observation. I have studied
conspiracy in the library, in the lab, and in the field. As the French
say, you never look under the bed unless you've hidden there yourself. I'm
certainly no coincidence theorist. Those guys couldn't outwit a box of
rocks. Listen up guys. This ain't rocket science. Once is happenstance.
Twice is coincidence. Three times is enemy action.
I prefer to think of myself not as a theorist of any kind, but as an
observant and analytical, independent researcher. Think of me as a sort of
unlicensed private investigator. I'm really a historian. I specialize in
secret history, particularly recent secret history. I had intended at one
point in my life to teach history for a living and began attending a small
state teachers college near my hometown. The Vietnam War intervened. I
began organizing against it early. I helped organize the first mass
demonstration against the war. The "Levitation of the Pentagon," in
October of 1967, drew a quarter of a million people to Washington. Six
weeks later I was arrested along with 28 others on a totally bogus drug
charge.
Years later I learned that this was part of a mass "dirty trick" campaign
waged by the FBI against the antiwar movement and the civil rights
movement, and especially against anybody working to unite the two against
our common enemies. The program was called COINTELPRO. It was run by a
father and son FBI agent team, Richard Held, Sr. and Richard Held, Jr.
They were wildly successful. My career as a teacher was ruined. No one
with my record can ever teach school. I got off easy. I attribute this to
luck of the draw. I was born white. Fred Hampton never did anything I
didn't do, and they shot him through the damn wall.
Some sheep are more equal than others. Gary Larson says that the sheep
that give us steel wool have no natural enemies. Don't believe it.
Everybody has enemies, even sheep. Especially sheep. In a very real real
sense, sheep are their own worst enemies. But yes, sheep have enemies.
Even paranoids have enemies. Even you have enemies. There are more of them
than you think, a lot more. Hell, you have enemies you never even heard
of. Really, you do. Just because you never heard of them before doesn't
mean they don't exist. They exist, all right. With proper technique or a
bit of assistance they can be observed. Even the best camouflage reveals
something to the educated eye. Their camouflage is excellent. They are
dressed in sheep's clothing. They blend right in. If only they were
imaginary, what a relief that would be. But, oh well. They are plotting
behind your back, even at this very moment, conspiring as it were, and not
in your best interest, nor in mine. That gives us something both crucial
and precious in common.
Conspiracy is as natural as breathing. Everyone does it, everyone. When we
spell rather than use words in front of our young children, we are
conspiring. When we agree to distract mommy so our siblings can raid the
cookie jar, we are conspiring.
When we imagine that the powers that be are somehow "above all that," we
are sadly deluded. That's how they came to power. To them, we are
livestock, nothing more. The ruling class, the so-called "elite," are
pastoralists by trade. They herd us. They fleece us. They sell us. They
rustle us. They breed us. They experiment on us without our knowledge or
consent. They slaughter us at will. They own us and they own our land.
That's how it is. That's how it's going to be, at least for as long as we
play along. Husbandry it's a verb. Look it up. Then look up cull.
Politics! It's enough to gag a maggot.
When I look far enough to the right or the left, I see the same damn
thing. A bunch of guys with guns wanna tell me how to fuck, which drugs to
take, and when to show up for work. The center, sheep in bondage, bleat
along.
Agree? Disagree? I’m at nessie [at] sfbg.com.
Oh yeah, he must be a bad mon, pass that splif!
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