It Worked For Hitler
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The Power of Lying “Power don’t come from a badge or a gun. Power comes from lying. Lying big, and gettin’ the whole damn world to play along with you. Once you got everybody agreeing with what they know in their hearts ain’t true, you’ve got ‘em by the balls.” – Sin City That quote from Frank Miller’s Sin City is hardly a new concept. Hitler’s Propaganda Minister, Joseph Goebbels, once said, “The bigger the lie, the more it will be believed.” All one need do is watch FOX “News” or one of the American Petroleum Institute television commercials to see brilliant spindoctoring in practice. It’s awe-inspiring, infuriating and frightening all at the same time, because it appears to be working. The corporate superpowers and the “conservative” politicians they’ve paid for have manipulated a disturbing number of people to speak, act and vote against self- interest. If they can get enough people doing that, nothing will significantly change and they will have won. Let’s go down a short list of lies, some still widely believed. In 2004 Paul O’Neill, former Treasury Secretary, a member of the Bush’s National Security team, said Bush wanted to invade before 9/11 and knew there were no WMDs, and that as a member of the security team he never saw any evidence of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction [1]. One week after 9/11 CIA Director George Tenet briefed President Bush in the Oval Office on top-secret intelligence that Saddam Hussein did not have weapons of mass destruction, a report that never made it into the NIE (National Intelligence Estimate) ultimately used to justify the invasion, both to the American people and to the Congress members who voted to invade [2]. The push for the Iraq war came months before this NIE was even available [3]. In our entire six and a half years in Iraq, most of which under Bush’s control of the military and Congress, credible evidence has never turned up that Saddam Hussein ever possessed WMDs beyond the outdated chemical and biological weapons he’d used on the Kurds fifteen years earlier. Even when in May of 2003 Bush created a specialized group of about 1,500 individuals to search the country for WMDs, none were ever found [4]. Finally, the common sense says the claim was not true. If there were any credible evidence of WMDs to be found, evidence that would have at least partly justified the criminal invasion of Iraq, wouldn’t have Bush and the neocons shouted it from every rooftop? Yet all this time they haven’t even been able to manufacture any credible-seeming evidence. Nonetheless, some people to this day will insist that Saddam either had those weapons or the ability to produce them. PT Barnum would have loved those people as born-suckers. “Clean Coal” Coal burns according to the laws of physical science: pollutants, including CO2, are given off and they have to go somewhere. The three expensive and unproven technologies for trying to make clean coal power are gasification, steam scrubbing, and carbon capture and sequestration. Most research in the USA is on gasification, but only two plants have been built and both of them only reduce sulfur and other acid rain pollutants, not CO2. They’re also offline 30-40% of the time versus the 5-10% required by the power industry. The steam scrubbing of CO2, which is the effort in Europe, kills the efficiency of the power plant, and there’s still the problem of where to put the dirty water [6]. Carbon capture and sequestration — storing the captured CO2 in deep saline aquifers — hasn’t been proven a viable solution, and it makes the utilities responsibile for monitoring storage and liable if CO2 leaks back into the atmosphere [6]. Given the history of private industry shifting responsibility to the Federal government, like the former Yucca Mountain nuclear disposal site, it’s a safe bet the U.S. taxpayer will be stuck with the bill for carbon storage. And there’s no guarantee of how safe or reliable it will be. With no proven (or efficient) way to mitigate the pollution from its combustion, “clean coal” is at best wishful thinking and at the most cynical, a deliberate lie to justify building new coal plants and raping the environment with coal mining. The final weak argument in favor of coal power, that it creates jobs, ignores the decline in coal jobs for decades due to increased mechanization. Coal makes people sick, benefits only a few and has a significant environmental impact. See Coal-is-Dirty.com for links to verifiable data supporting these claims [7]. “Drill, Baby, Drill” Forgetting for the moment that oil is nearly as bad a fossil fuel for the environment as coal, let’s concentrate on pure supply and demand. The USA consumes seven billion (7B) barrels of oil per year or nineteen million per day [9]. At the same time we have the following amounts of “technically” recoverable oil in the following locations[10]: USA West Coast – 10B barrels, Gulf of Mexico – 40B barrels, Alaska fields (excluding ANWR) – 6 to 13B barrels, and [11] Artic National Wildlife Refuge – 3 to 12B barrels. Thus we’d risk another huge oil spill off the California coast for an amount of oil that would barely last us a full year and we’d trash a pristine wildlife refuge for nine to fifteen months of oil. I’m sure your Hummer is important to your lifestyle, but what about that national conscience Nixon alluded to in 1969? In addition to the foolishness of raiding the environment for wasteful energy, it eventually puts us at risk for shortages of petroleum derivatives for which we currently have no alternatives: plastics, synthetic fabrics, paints, lubricants, drugs and chemical fertilizers on which large-scale farming is dependent [12]. The biggest lie is that increased drilling will benefit Americans. However, a look at the stock market profiles of some of the largest oil companies shows they sell two to three times as much of their products overseas as they do domestically. Furthermore the ratio of income per employee borders on obscene. BP makes $3.29M per employee, Chevron makes $3.95M and Exxon makes $5.32 million dollars per employee [13] [14] [15]. So of course they have plenty of spare dollars to grease politicians and pay for slick TV spots with WASPish blondes telling you how good drilling is for the USA. And if you still believe the Big Oil lies after all this, I have a lovely bridge to sell you. “Bush Made Us Safer” Immediately after the 9/11 attacks, even old adversaries at least temporarily put aside their dislike for the USA. Leaders in Europe, Russia, China and Iran expressed their sorrow and dismay. Cuba offered its airspace and airports to American planes. In Iran and other Muslim countries there were candlelight vigils in sympathy for America. Even Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat condemned the 9/11 attacks [16] [17]. Nearly the whole world was on our side. Then Bush made his unjustified, premeditated attack on Iraq (See “There are weapons of mass destruction in Iraq” above), innocent men, women and children began to die, and we squandered all of that goodwill and turned it into enmity and hatred. It’s a matter of common sense that, in a dangerous and hostile world, friends and allies are important to staying safe, and our March 2003 invasion of Iraq changed all of that. Even in countries where governments officially supported us, the majority of the citizens did not[18]. Of far greater concern is the number of Muslims who became radicalized after Iraqi blood began spilling. According to a 2006 NIE (National Intelligence Estimate) from the CIA, the Iraq war has turned more people of Islamic faith against us and caused the terrorist threat to grow [19]. The U.S. occupation of Iraqi became a potent recruiting tool for al Qaeda and other terrorist groups in the Middle East and in European countries like Great Britain [20] [21]. Most unforgivably, by devoting all of his premeditated attention on Iraq, Bush not only allowed Osama Bin Laden to escape in Afghanistan, by concentrating so much attention on Iraq, he allowed the Taliban to regroup and begin to take power once again. A 2008 NIE reported Afghanistan is in a “downward spiral” [22], which today forces President Obama to commit troops he wouldn’t need to had Bush not ignored Afghanistan for his Iraq vendetta. And Osama Bin Laden is still free to cheerlead Islamic terrorists. That’s not what I call “safer.” Then there is the domestic and economic fallout of Bush’s reign, all of it directly or indirectly negatively impacting our national security: the banking and real estate meltdown, the insane rise of oil prices ($30/barrel in 2003 to $147/barrel in 2008) [23], ports and borders that were never secured back when we could afford it (before the current recession) and a Patriot Act that severely weakened our Constitutionally guaranteed protections. To quote a 2009 analysis of the Bush presidency by the Council on Foreign Relations, “George W. Bush inherited a robust economy, a budgetary surplus, a rested military, and, even after 9/11, a world largely at peace and well-disposed toward the United States. He handed off to his successor a recession, a massive deficit and debt, a stretched and exhausted military, two wars, and a world marked by pronounced anti-Americanism.” [24] In the face of all that evidence and logic, anyone who can still argue with a straight face that Bush “kept us safe” or “made us safer” has either drunk so much neocon Kool-Aid they are impervious to facts and logic or they are completely unwilling to admit they may have made a mistake. Then there is the Stupid Factor. While I hesitate to propound that a significant number of my fellow citizens are actually full-blown stupid — which is terrifying, considering that these people help elect our leaders and bring children into the world who may become similarly infected with stupidity — I’d like to be charitable for a moment and suggest that fear and gullibility allow them to be swayed by modern day corporate con men and the politicians they own, who make Soviet and Fascist propagandists look like rank amateurs. Another one of Josef Goebbles’ quotes offers a ray of hope inside the cynicism it carries: “If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State.” The hope is that the political, economic and military consequences of eight years of neocon spindoctoring are crashing down all around us. And therein lies the opportunity to turn things around. |
Those who seek to offer hope and a new sense of direction can only do so by opening the eyes of those who’ve bought into these lies for so long. By calmly presenting unimpeachable facts and solid reasoning (as I’ve done here) and holding the baiting and name-calling to a minimum (which I’ve tried to do in spite of my incredible frustration with the “teabaggers” who oppose positive change in this country) perhaps we can slowly peels the scales away from the eyes of those hooked by these lies. Perhaps then they may learn to think on their own and learn to question what corporate PR, politicians and FOX (or CNN, for that matter) tells them. Sometimes, questioning even the leaders you’ve trusted for years is the most patriotic thing you can do.
REFERENCES
0. “Iraq Opens Oilfields as Exxon, Shell Seek Foothold” Bloomberg.com 06/25/20051. “Bush ‘plotted Iraq war from start’” BBC News 01/12/2004
2. “Bush knew Saddam had no weapons of mass destruction” Salon.com 09/06/2007
3. “PR Push for Iraq War Preceded Intelligence Findings” National Security Archive, George Washington University 08/22/2008
4. “Iraq and Weapons of Mass Destruction” National Security Archive, George Washington University 02/11/2004
5. “World Energy Use and CO2 Emissions” US Dept of Energy May 2004
6. “The Myth of Clean Coal” Environment 360, Yale University 03/06/2008
9. Oil Facts – US. Dept. Energy
10. Impacts of Increased Access to Oil and Natural Gas Resources in the Lower 48 Federal Outer Continental Shelf – US. Dept. Energy
11. “U.S. May Open Oil Reserve In Alaska to Development” New York Times 01/18/2003
12. Wikipedia – petrochemicals
13. Advanced Financial Network – Exxon-Mobil data
14. Advanced Financial Network – Chevron Oil data
15. Advanced Financial Network – BP PLC data
16. “INTERNATIONAL REACTIONS FOR 9/11″ History.com
17. Scholars of Islam & the Tragedy of Sept. 11th
18. Gallup poll Eurpoean opposition to potential Iraq War USA Today 02/14/2003
19. “Release the NIE on Iraq and Terrorism!” The Nation 09/25/2006
20. “War Helps Recruit Terrorists, Hill Told” The Washington Post 02/17/2005
21. “Iraq war ‘helped terrorists recruit in Britain’” The Daily Mail 02/22/2007
22. “U.S. Study Is Said to Warn of Crisis in Afghanistan” New York Times 10/08/2008
23. “2000s energy crisis” Wikipedia
24. “The Iraq War in Perspective ” Council on Foreign Relations op-ed 05/04/2009













Right on as always, Christine.
Comment by amyD — September 15, 2009 @ 7:49 pm
Christine, I just subbed to your blog’s feed. A well composed (in both senses) essay.
Here’s an oldie but a goodie, not cuz it’ll ever happen, but it does make ya think:
http://www.boingboing.net/2004/11/04/my_modest_proposal_t.html
Comment by Bill Brent — September 15, 2009 @ 8:52 pm
Way to go Christine! I’m so glad you’ve got a blog now! I have your blog linked to mine now, so that more folks can find their way to you. Plus I get automatic updates as well, so right on! Sing it!
Sam
Comment by SamanthaQ — September 15, 2009 @ 8:54 pm
Christine, I just remembered another blog link appropriate to your theme here:
http://wave4.wordpress.com/2008/08/25/contagion-and-remission-of-ideologies/
–Bill
Comment by Bill Brent — September 16, 2009 @ 1:03 am
Great job, Christine! I finally got around to reading it today and I was wowed! A masterful job of summarizing and elucidating the madness that has gripped this country for awhile now. You’re quite the political commentator, my dear!
Comment by Kat — September 20, 2009 @ 12:47 pm
Irak…
John mentioned the First Gulf War, and I have a comment on that. I saw a video of The U. S. Ambassador to Iraq, April Glaspie, being interviewed by Saddam Hussein 10 days before Iraq invaded Kuwait. Hussein made it clear that there were troops Iraqi tr…
Trackback by Irak — November 19, 2009 @ 5:49 am