Tuesday, November 01, 2005

The Neocon Agenda: Will We Undermine It? Or, Is Democracy Dead?

Publicly exposing—as a first step toward discrediting and undermining—the fundamentally anti-democratic neoconservative agenda must fast become a top sociopolitical priority not only of progressives, liberals and "Third Way" New Democrats and Labour supporters, but of all the world's citizens who demand that their so-called democratic governments honorably represent rather than mendaciously deceive their respective citizenries.

The neocon agenda endangers us all, directly through the violent upheaval it has spurred on in very short order, and indirectly by way of other corrupt regimes which may decide to model the hypocritical example of the US and UK governments.

But only the American and British people have the power to demand from within that their respective experiments in democracy survive the neocon agenda, which is playing out as much in Britain as it is in the United States.

All the world has witnessed the lies and the supreme arrogance of both the US and UK governments these past few years. We have all witnessed, in cerebral numbers provided in print if not in person or graphic detail, the tragic deaths of tens of thousands of individual human beings killed by way of our governments' illegal war of aggression in Iraq. We have all seen the plunge into the immoral, inhumane and, thus, criminal abyss of officially sanctioned torture, state-sponsored kidnappings and disappearances (officially known as "extraordinary renditions") and indefinite detentions of individuals imprisoned for years without charge or due process of law.

We now know beyond any doubt—as the majority of the world's politically aware knew before the start of the war, despite the onslaught of rhetoric spewed by politicians to quell dissent and the continual drumbeat of the corporate media-delivered propaganda craftily packaged as if to deliver us from the evil that is, apparently, commonsense—that this war could only have been sold to the American and British people were we to be bombarded by our own governments' criminal lies. And, sold it was, rolled out and marketed as would a psychologically researched, high-end advertising campaign of an immoral corporation which seeks to maximize shareholder value through the plying of harmful products, practices or byproducts. Yet, when democratic representation exists in name only, corrupt politicians, like their corrupt corporate executive counterparts, will continue to rule, as we the people rue, the day.

In an article entitled, "Indicting America," written by former chief UN weapons inspector, Scott Ritter, and published on the 29th of October by Information Clearing House, Mr. Ritter said the following:

Void of a major backlash on the part of the American people in response to the deliberate falsification and deceit that has transpired regarding Iraq and the now-debunked case for war, the Libby indictment may prove to be little more than an exercise in damage control.

Already senior Republican officials, such as Texas Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchinson, are calling the Libby indictment a mere "technicality." Right-wing pundits refer to the indictment as the "criminalization of politics," as if lying one's way into an illegal war of aggression is somehow akin to politics as usual.

In a speech before the US House of Representatives on the 26th of October, US Congressman Ron Paul, a Republican from Texas, had the following to say about the neoconservative agenda:

We have been warned. Prepare for a broader war in the Middle East, as plans are being laid for the next U.S.-led regime change—in Syria. A UN report on the death of Lebanese Prime Minister Rafig Hariri elicited this comment from a senior U.S. policy maker: "Out of tragedy comes an extraordinary strategic opportunity." This statement reflects the continued neo-conservative, Machiavellian influence on our foreign policy. The "opportunity" refers to the long-held neo-conservative plan for regime change in Syria, similar to what was carried out in Iraq.

This plan for remaking the Middle East has been around for a long time. Just as 9/11 served the interests of those who longed for changes in Iraq, the sensationalism surrounding Hariri’s death is being used to advance plans to remove Assad.

Please note, in case you missed it, that the above was delivered on the floor of the US House of Representatives by a Republican Congressman from Texas.

As these two quotes suggest, there exists an overabundance of information publicly available via both mainstream and independent media, as well as from primary, sources to demonstrate that the neocon movement is, indeed, anti-democratic, out-of-line with traditional Anglo-American political philosophy, and is inherently dishonest in that it relies on a foreign-policy elite which deliberately deceives the very citizenry which such elected representatives and other government officials have sworn oaths to serve. Such Machiavellian deception is justified in their minds because they quite rightly believe that their foreign-policy objectives will not be tolerated, let alone supported, by a well-meaning American (or British) public which, by and large, continues to believe that the history they learned in school is true, and that the United States (or Britain) only goes to war when it absolutely must do so to defend itself from harm, never in outright aggression.

There is no shortage of evidence that our respective democracies in the US and UK are in grave danger of a fate worse than being qualified as ostensible; they are very nearly dead. Nor is there a shortage of criminal evidence by which the American and British people can and must demand, not "an exercise in damage control" but, the "major backlash" of the sort Mr. Ritter spoke of, above.

Will the American and British people demand—not wish, hope or plead for, but demand—that their ransacked, just-barely ostensible, and corporatized democracies be exchanged for the real McCoy, true democracies built upon solid foundations of truth, law and mutual respect, so that democracy itself may live?

______________________

Additional Links:

"Cameron Is No Moderate" comment by Neil Clark in The Guardian (24 Oct 05);

"The Nice Mr Cameron" blog posting by Turbulent Cleric;

The Henry Jackson Society: Project for Democratic Geopolitics website: note the "London Launch" scheduled to be held at the Houses of Parliament on 22nd November 05;

The Henry Jackson Society "Statement of Principles", Cambridge, UK (11 Mar 05);

The Henry Jackson Society "Links" webpage;

"We've Been Neo-Conned" article by US Rep. Ron Paul (12 Jul 03): an old article, yes, but like the below document, as relevant as ever;

Project for the New American Century "Rebuilding America's Defenses" report, released September 2000.

Receive iNoodle.com via Email

3 Comments:

Anonymous Roger Drowne EC said...

WHEN IN THE COURSE OF HUMAN EVENTS

.

IT BECOMES NECESSARY for the PEOPLE of the United States

TO ALTER or ABOLISH the United States Government

as it exists in the year…

2001 / 02 / 03 / 04 / 05 / 06

.

Using the Authority, Law, and Intentions of the Constitution

and the Declaration of Independence.

.

And Now the People Step Forward

and Charge High Treason,

and Show that Democracy in its roots today,

.

Is Corrupt.

.

And that the Constitution has been Altered and Betrayed

in Favor of…

A Small Group of Millionaires,

.

Over Another...

the Governed,

.

the People of the United States.

.

And that the Election Process is UN-fair

and has been Overwhelmed

and Monopolized

by Millionaires

and their millions of dollars

.

BU$H = TREASON … Continued at…
.

http://www.RogerART.com
.

SEE on left… LINK ( 2 ) to

( Re-Written ) Declaration of Independence


SEE ALL ( these words in ) 15 + PAINTINGS at…

http://www.rogerart.com/20_PATRIOT%20DEMOCRACY.htm

Thank You, Roger Drowne EC

See, / RogerART.com / Other Web Sites

http://www.RogerART.com

http://www.OneGlobalCommunity.com

http://www.TheBuffaloParty.com

Wed Nov 02, 07:44:00 PM GMT  
Blogger The Unknown Candidate said...

Bravo for your piece and your blog. Keep it up.

Wed Nov 02, 10:21:00 PM GMT  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Good article. You asked if the citizenry will mobilize to take back
government and make it a democracy again. Some 50 years ago Eisenhower
warned the country about the military industrial complex. Lincoln warned
of the dangers of corporate power before that.

It is much cheaper to buy a politician than it is to conduct business in
an ethical and socially responsible manner. So we can forget being saved
by politicians. They are pretty much all bought. The courts are more
toothless than ever, thanks to our politicians. It is much more cost
effective to have a fund from which to pay fines for breaking laws than
it is to adhere to the laws, whether they be environmental, or being
honest when asking for reimbursement from a government entitlement
program, for example Medicare and Medicaid. The budget cutting favors
the corrupt by reducing the number of personnel involved in oversight.

In short, we have a mess. And the answer to whether the public will rise
up and change things is obvious to me. No. Not a chance. Even were many
people to start actually reading, nothing short of a miracle in itself,
they would have to delve much harder than most have the capacity to do.
And then there are the voting machines. Not a chance that those in power
would relinquish their control over those.

If I were younger, I would look for a job where paying taxes was
essentially an option. I give to those few groups I believe to have
ethics, for example Doctors without Borders, and Mercy Corp. I don't
give to the American Red Cross. I support no organized religion, but
believe in God. I do continue to vote, but believe it is mostly a sham.
I give to moveon.org occasionally, but no longer have any faith in the
Democrats. I bought a hybrid car immediately after the presidential
election because I anticipated high gas prices. I occasionally eat dairy
products and fish, but I mostly avoid support of factory farming. I
don't shop at Walmart and I think long and hard before buying. I won't
fill my gas tank at Exxon Mobile, but will use Citgo and BP. I am trying
to find some land on which to build a geodome home - something very
energy efficient and almost hurricane proof. (I live in Florida.) When
the phone company managed to write legislation.passed by the state
senate, increasing its rates considerably, I fired them and went with an
internet provider.

What I'm getting at here is that I believe people will mobilize when
they are hit in the pocketbook. I think that an organized effort to pay
back corporate governance in a way they will notice might achieve
something. I think people will get behind an effort when they are
sufficiently hurting. And, for the reasons mentioned above, I think that
is about all the citizenry can do. Laura, R.N.

Fri Nov 04, 11:58:00 PM GMT  

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

Links to this post:

Create a Link

<< Home