The War that Destroyed America
By John Stanton
and Wayne Madsen
19 March 2002
In a maddening repetition of history, the young
warfighters of the United States, along with those of its
coalition partners,
find themselves in battle with an amorphous opponent in a
global counter-insurgency campaign managed by paranoid policy
makers who see themselves as the enlightened sons of God.
As
the illegitimate and extremist government of the United States
prepares to expend another generation of its youth
for power, money and resources thousands of kilometers from
home, they are negligently and criminally allowing the infrastructure,
health and welfare of the United States to deteriorate.
As
America wages World War III against its 21st century barbarians--the
Taliban and Al Qaeda (the Visigoths and Huns?)--in a war
that may well see the use of nuclear weapons, the American
Empire seems doomed to duplicate the concluding events of
476 A.D. And it’s not Al Qaeda’s 5,000 militants
that will destroy the USA, it’s the current "selected" government
that will sacrifice the future of the world’s greatest
experiment in freedom on the altar of fascism.
Close to 200
years ago, the English novelist-historian Edward Gibbon commented
that, "The decline of Rome was the
natural and inevitable effect of immoderate greatness. Prosperity
ripened the principle of decay; the causes of destruction
multiplied with the extent of conquest; and, as soon as time
or accident had removed the artificial supports, the stupendous
fabric yielded to the pressure of its own weight. The empire
of Rome was firmly established by the singular and perfect
coalition of its members. The subject nations, resigning
the hope, and even the wish, of independence, embraced the
character of Roman citizens. But this union was purchased
by the loss of national freedom...and the servile provinces,
destitute of life and motion, expected their safety from
the mercenary troops and governors, who were directed by
the orders of a distant court. The happiness of a hundred
million [people] depended on the personal merit of one or
two men [emperors] perhaps children [in Rome], whose minds
were corrupted by education, luxury, and despotic power...
The multiplication of oppressive taxes was countered and
evaded by the rich, who shifted the burden to the poor, who
in turn also dodged them and fled to the woods and mountains
to become Rome's rebels and robbers..."
And so it seems
America will share the same fate.
In the coming years, trillions
of taxpayer dollars previously earmarked for non-military
expenditures will be siphoned
off to feed the voracious appetite of the Grendelesqe US
military-industrial complex. And for what purpose? Billions
more dollars for a grandiose national missile defense instead
of billions for the tools the young Special Operations warfighters,
who will inevitably fight and die in countries as far-a-field
as Afghanistan, Iraq, Colombia and Georgia, need to do their
jobs. Trillions more dollars will be directed to a military
and intelligence establishment that failed to protect and
defend American citizens and the U.S. Constitution on September
11, 2001. And as more billions and billions of dollars get
poured into Homeland Defense, it's worth looking at The State
of the Union, or should we say State of the Homeland, to
see if the warfighters who return from their efforts in foreign
lands will recognize the country they left. For while Americans
fight on the frontiers of strange and distant lands, they
do not understand that their country is disintegrating. And
the numbers tell the story.
Dieing Nation
The CIA's World Fact Book 2001
cautions that "long-term
problems [for the United States] include inadequate investment
in economic infrastructure, rapidly rising medical costs
of an aging population, sizable trade deficits, and stagnation
of family income in the lower economic groups." And
so it goes.
In 2002, over 31 million Americans live in poverty, according
to Poverty USA, a website run by the Catholic Campaign for
Human Development. 1 in 6 American children live in poverty.
Minorities, of course, are hardest hit with 22.1% of African-Americans
(who experience three times the poverty rate for white non-Hispanics),
21.2% of Hispanics, 10.8% of Asians and Pacific Islanders,
and 7.5% of white non-Hispanics struggle to exist on a daily
basis in what proponents of American greatness liked to describe
as the wealthiest nation in history. The United States has
the dubious distinction of having the second highest percentage
of children living in poverty in the industrialized world
and one of the most disgusting track records for low birth
weight of infants.
If ever there were a subject that was "underreported" it
is the plight of America's children. The National School
Boards Association's Ten Critical Threats To America's Children:
Warning Signs for the Next Millennium provides disturbing
data on the state of America's youth. Despite these obvious
disasters, the Bush regime is more interested in school vouchers
and the "unborn" rather than the horrors that millions
of young people in our country, and their parents, experience.
Over 3 million children experienced hunger in 1998 in the
wealthiest country in the world. In 1998, approximately 11.1
million children younger than 18 had no health insurance.
In 1998, close to 44.3 million Americans had no health insurance
and 11.1 million - or 25 percent - were younger than 18,
according to U.S. Census Bureau statistics.
Because of lax
pollution laws, 900,000 children in the United States have
elevated levels of lead in their bloodstream,
putting them at risk for a variety of health and behavioral
problems. There are 96,000 schools serving State subsidized
lunches to 26 million children which means that these young
Americans are starving. The sheer number of America's youth
who have been killed or wounded by gunfire in recent years
is shocking when placed in historical context. Between 1979
and 1996, more than 75,000 American children and teens were
killed and another375,000 were wounded by firearms. That's
almost 20,000 more deaths and 225,000 more casualties than
American troops suffered in the Vietnam War, according to
Ten Critical Threats.
One year ago in March 2001, the American
Society of Civil Engineers failed America's infrastructure
with a grade of
D+. "When you've got rolling blackouts in California,
bridges crumbling in Milwaukee, and kids in Kansas City attending
class in a former boys' restroom, something is desperately
wrong," said then ASCE President Robert W. Bein, a civil
engineer from Irvine, California. According to ASCE's website
www.asce.org, "The solutions to these problems involve
more than money, but as with most things in life, you get
what you pay for. America has been seriously under-investing
in its infrastructure for decades and this report card reflects
that."
A Nice Glass of Turbid Water
Among the many
problem areas, one of the more notorious involves water.
Wastewater declined from a "D+" in 1998
to a "D," while drinking water remained a "D." Wastewater
and drinking water systems are both quintessential examples
of aged systems that need to be updated. For example, some
sewer systems are 100 years old. Aged drinking water systems
are structurally obsolete. The results of maintaining such
antiquated systems have sometimes been fatal. In 1993, 100
people died and 400,000 became ill after Milwaukee's water
supply had been contaminated by cryptosporidium, a virulent
microscopic parasite resistant to chlorine and filtration.
That
very same year, Washington, DC experienced a four-day boil
water alert arising from excessive "turbidity" in
the city's water. The Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta
measures turbidity by analyzing the presence of small "suspended
particles" in a glass of water poured from a municipal
water supply's tap. The murky water from the Dalecarlia Reservoir
in Washington in December 1993 was found to be very turbid
- dangerously so. Little wonder, since many of the reservoir's
conduits were built during the Civil War. The shortfall of
$11 billion for drinking water and $12 billion in wastewater
only account for improvements to the current system and do
not even take into consideration the demands of a growing
population.
ASCE estimated it would take roughly $1.3 trillion
dollars to fix America's infrastructure. That amount is roughly
equivalent
to George Bush II tax cut that benefited primarily the nation's
most wealthy individuals.
As of 1997, the richest five percent of U.S. households held
more than 60 percent of the nation's private wealth and the
top 1 percent of households held 40 percent of the wealth
according to data from inequality.org. There are approximately
500,000 to 600,000 homeless Americans wandering throughout
American communities, notes the National Coalition for Homelessness.
And the Disaster Center reports that for the year ending
in 2000, 105,703 Americans were murdered or raped in their
own country.
And now we hear from our Teutonic-sounding
Office of Homeland Security that our nation's pipelines and
refineries
are vulnerable
to terrorist attack. Not so fast! In August 2000, a natural
gas pipeline exploded near Carlsbad, New Mexico, killing
12 people, many of them families on camping vacations. A
little over a year earlier, a natural gas pipeline exploded
in Bellingham, Washington killing two 10-year old boys and
an 18 year-old teenage male. According to the Environment
News Service, since 1986, there have been more than 5,700
pipeline accidents, killing more than 300 people and releasing
some six million gallons of oil, gas and other pollutants
into the environment.
Was Osama bin Laden responsible for
them? No. Was it Sadaam Hussein? No, again. The perpetrator
was the U.S. Government.
It turns out that the Interior Department's Office of Pipeline
Safety, a whorish marionette for the oil and natural gas
industry, failed to conduct adequate pipeline safety inspections.
The oil industry, which now controls the White House and
the Executive branch, does not want increased pipeline inspections
for fear that they will cost them money. A docile Congress,
bought and paid for by the oil industry, rejected legislation
to force the industry to inspect and fix its pipelines. The
mother of one of the 10 year old boys killed, speaking to
the Environment News Service, had this message for the "Evil
Doers" of the oil industry: "Your profit means
little to us in the face of the lives we care about."
So,
the families of those killed in the explosions had to be
content to bury their loved ones without the satisfaction
of seeing the government correct its evil ways. It's very
much the same logic that results in Arthur Andersen getting
indicted for keeping Enron's books, while chief Enronite "Kenny
Boy" Lay remains unscathed. This would be like the government
indicting John Dillinger's get-away driver while leaving
the bank robber free and clear of any charges.
Bread and Circuses
Historians write that the Roman Empire,
in its final days, experienced many of the phenomena that
now plague Pax Americana.
Roman senators formed their own wealthy class of landowners
who rarely attended senate meetings but enjoyed the privileges
of their office. Consider that most U.S. Senators and Representatives
spend most of their time outside of Washington soliciting
contributions from corporations. One does not need a time
machine to actually witness what was occurring in Rome during
its tumultuous decline. William Langer, in his tome An Encyclopedia
of World History, writes "the lethargy" of Rome
resulted from "the unwieldy and inflexible system and
... the poor mental caliber of the rulers." (the inbred
George W. Bush II and the insane John Ashcroft?).
Yes, sadly,
it seems that our own neo-Romanesque leaders share many things
in common with their quirky and mentally
impaired Pax Romana counterparts. Take Nero and Claudius
for example. The latter is described by Langer as a "driveling
imbecile." Claudius was known for taking away the power
of the Senate to investigate financial crimes cases and instead
granting that power to imperial procurators. Bush II, of
course, is stonewalling Congress's attempt to investigate
ties between the administration and the oil industry, instead
leaving the investigation of Enron up to his own politically-motivated "procurators" in
the Justice Department.
For his part, Nero was actually responsible
for setting Rome on fire - during which he sang to the
music of a lyre a poem
about the burning of Troy. It turns out that Nero used
the burning of Rome as a pretext to increase his already
substantial
dictatorial powers and exterminate Christian believers
in the city. John Ashcroft -- who requests anointment with
oil
by a follower before the day's activities-is a theological
descendant of those early Christians. He now presides over
the systematic article-by-article disposal of the U.S.
Constitution. The man bellows religious songs at news conferences,
turns
away in horror at statues of females with bare breasts,
and eschews Calico cats as signs of Satan. Nero would have
found
comfort and friendship in such bizarre behavior.
As America
seems on a path to repeat the history that swept away the
Roman Empire, we should remember the words of one
of our greatest symbols of popular resistance: "Our
only hope today lies in our ability to recapture the revolutionary
spirit and go into a sometimes hostile world declaring eternal
hostility to poverty, racism and militarism," said Martin
Luther King, Jr. It seems we owe that to those who expect
to return to a vibrant democracy.
Copyright © 2002 by
the News Insider, John Stanton and Wayne Madsen
John Stanton is a Virginia-based writer on
national security affairs and Wayne Madsen is a Washington,
DC-based
investigative
journalist who writes and comments frequently on civil
liberties and human rights issues.
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