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Perpetual
War, Perpetual Terror In the councils of
government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted
influence,
whether sought or unsought, by the military industrial complex. The
potential
for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist. We
must
never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or
democratic
processes. We should take nothing for granted. Only an alert and
knowledgeable
citizenry can compel the proper meshing of the huge industrial and
military
machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals, so that
security and
liberty may prosper together.” —— Dwight D. Eisenhower,
1961 In the
Today,
the The
MIC’s front for
assuring continual human violence is the The
Pentagon and the
Military Industrial Complex are one and the same,
having morphed over time to form the most lethal killing institution
the world
has ever seen. Through a sliding and revolving door that turns citizen
soldiers
into armament industry executives and company officers into military
policy
makers, the MIC has embedded itself into the military branch of the The
Pentagon is the
Department of War, not Defense. It is in business to kill, kill, and
kill some
more. Without war, violence and weapons there is no Pentagon. And so to
survive,
to remain a player, wars must be created, weapons must be allocated,
profits
must be made and the Military Industrial Complex must continue
exporting and
manufacturing violence and conflict throughout the globe. And, as
always, in
the great tradition of the We are
told our nation
is in imminent danger, that we are a mushroom cloud waiting to happen. And so we fear, transforming our mass uneasiness into
nationalistic
and patriotic fervor, wrapping ourselves up in the flag and the
Military
Industrial Complex. We have fallen into the mouse trap, becoming
the
subservient slaves of an engine run by greed, interested not in peace
but
constant war, constant killing and constant sacrifice to the almighty
dollar.
Brainwashed to believe that War is Peace we sound the drums of war,
marching
our sons and daughters to a battle that cannot be won either by sword
or gun. We are
programmed to see
the world as a conflict between “Us” versus “Them”, “Good” versus
“Evil,” that
we must inflict death on those who are not with us and on those against
us. The
MIC prays on our human emotions and psychology, exploiting human nature
and our
still fragile memories of the horrors of 9/11, manipulating us to
believe that
what they say and do is right for us all. We unite behind one common
enemy,
fearing for our lives, complacent and obedient, blindly descending like
a
plague of locusts onto foreign land, devastating, usurping, conquering
and
devouring those who have been deemed enemies of the state, those who
harbor and
live among them, “evil ones,” “evildoers” and “haters of freedom,” all
for the
sake of profit and pillage, ideology and empire. Power unfettered and
unleashed, our freedoms die and are released The
so-called “War on
Terror” is but a charade, a fear-engendering escapade, designed to last
into
perpetuity, helping guarantee that the Military Industrial Complex will
grow
exponentially in power. It is a replacement for a Cold War long ago
since
retired and unable to deliver a massive increase in defense spending.
Terrorists and the countries that harbor them have replaced the Rumblings
of bringing
back the draft are growing louder, and if you think your children and
grandchildren will escape it, think again. In a war without end, in
battles
that do not cease, the MIC will need human flesh from which to recycle
those
who perish and fall wounded. Empire building needs bodies and drones to
go with
military might, instruments of death need trigger fingers and human
brains,
and, with so many expendable young men and women being conditioned in
this
so-called “war on terror,” MIC will continue its reprogramming of
citizen
soldiers from peaceful civilians to warmongering killing machines.
After all,
“War is Peace.” Yet
the Department of
War, ever steadfast to use its weaponry, fails to realize that no
amount of
money will win this war if the root causes of terrorism are not
confronted as
priority number one. If you get to the roots, you pull out the weed. If
not, it
grows back again and again. But perhaps a perpetual war is what MIC has
sought
all along. A lifetime of combat, a lifetime of
profit, a
lifetime of power. Assembly lines of missiles, bombs, tanks and
aircraft
operate without pause, helping expand a sluggish economy and the
interests of
the Pax Americana. Profit over people, violence before peace, the
American
killing machine continues on its path to human extinction, and it is
the hands
and minds of our best and brightest building and creating these
products of
decimation. While
we look over our
shoulders for terrorists and evildoers, the world ominously looks
directly at
us with both eyes intently focused on the armies of the “Great Satan”
and the
“Evil Empire,” not knowing which nation will be attacked or on whom the
storm
of satellite-guided-missiles will rain down on next. Every action has
an equal
and opposite reaction. In becoming pre-emptive warmongers, we are also
becoming
victims of our own making, helping assure a swelling wrath of revenge,
resentment and retaliation against us. If we kill we will be killed, if
we
destroy we will be destroyed. The MIC is leading us down a steep canyon
of
fury, making us a pariah, a rogue country in the eyes of the world. We
are
becoming that which we fear most, a terrorist state. As political
scientist and
ex-marine C. Douglas Lummis has said, “Air bombardment is state
terrorism, the
terrorism of the rich. It has burned up and blasted apart more
innocents in the
past six decades than have all the anti-state terrorists who have ever
lived.
Something has benumbed our consciousness against this reality.” Today
we are
seen, along with When
the day comes, not
too far in the future, when one of our metropolitan cities goes up in a
mushroom cloud or in a vapor of suffocation or when tens of thousands
of
citizens die of biological or chemical demons, we must dive deep into
our
national psyche and question why we allowed those in power to guide us
down the
road of cause and effect, action and reaction. And, in the end, we must
realize
that those same WMDs we once so gleefully created and exported have
come back
to our shores, haunting us and our children for the suffering we have
helped
spread onto the world through our idleness, impotence to act and
automaton-like
acquiescence. Can
you imagine spending $400 billion dollars to alleviate poverty in the Manuel Valenzuela is an attorney,
consultant, freelance
writer and author of Echoes in the Wind, a novel that will be published
in
2004. He lives in |