Untitled Document

The Military/Industrial complex makes its "living" killing!
I believe Albert Camus [L'Etranger
(1942) ], lately said to have been read by George W. Bush, would have called
that absurd.
The business of defense contractors —even those only peripherally connected
with the production of weapons themselves —is death! Yet another way of
putting it: The Military/Industrial Complex is Murder, Inc.
Bush, of course, will not admit that our country has become Murder, Inc. His
party will even deny that we've become it's euphemism: The National Security
State. The origins of our Murder, Inc. is the National Security Act of 1947
—a blueprint for fascism . It granted to the Pentagon powers of unlimited
defense spending.
It would not have been possible to justify such largesse without a bogeyman
to be dragged out whenever the population is roused by truth to suspicion. In
1947, the bogeyman was the specter of communism —a tactic urged upon President
Harry Truman by GOP Senator Arthur Vandenburg. The climate of fear is maintained
by both parties but with less embarrassment by the GOP. [See: The
Decline of the American Empire, Gore Vidal] In what Vidal called "a
fit of conscience" never witnessed among modern Republicans, President
Eisenhower warned us that such a Military/Industrial complex might establish
permanent control over the state itself.
Fascism is not defined by the number of its victims, but by the way it kills
them. —Jean-Paul Sartre
Sartre was, of course, correct. Killing someone for revenge, an act of passion,
even a petty theft is one thing. But a society is morally lost when mass murder
becomes its number one export. In such a society, everyone is guilty. That is
Fascism. That IS absurdity. The rationale du jour is terrorism.
Terrorism can only be exploited in an atmosphere of irrational and endemic
hatred. Hatred is nurtured by a party that could not possibly exist without
the various strawmen upon which it directs the bile and hatred of the American
right wing —hatred of science, hatred of the humanities, especially art,
literature, and most of all: philosophy. Right wing hatred of philosophy is
most certainly based upon its inherent distrust of critical thought itself.
The GOP finds the process of critical thinking subversive of its own inflexible,
unquestioned dogma. This is dogma that they would, of course, impose upon you
in various and subtle ways. It is a brave and rare person who dares think outside
the box.
For grins, let's factor out the GDP, the billions spent and the billions earned
on the arts of war and those who enable it. We are third world. And for all
that, we can thank the most absurd party of man's creation: the GOP.
What matters - all that matters, really - is the will to happiness, a kind
of enormous, ever-present consciousness. The rest - women, art, success -
is nothing but excuses. —Albert Camus
It would appear that America's raison d'etre has become the mass murder of people
from Viet Nam to Iraq. If Camus was right, then the collective will of America
is doing precisely what it really wants to do. There are no rationales. There
are no excuses. And the world will not be safe until America faces that ugly
fact about itself.
Now, if Bush would expect us to believe that he's actually read anything by
an existentialist, let him begin by withdrawing American troops, however belatedly,
out of Iraq.
_________________________
Read from Looking Glass News
War
is a Racket!