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Arma-geddon Sick of You World to U.S. as Americans Prepare to Level Fallujah Bush's
Sword of Damocles is poised above the people and city of True,
Americans do have elections, and candidates often take different stances
on important issues. But forget the blue state, red state diversion, an
artifact of the Of
course it is important not to forget the stench wafting from this rotten
election. The American fascists, who already thought they had a mandate
from God, now think they have one from the American people. Not that any
true believer needs any imprimatur other than the former, but hey, it
can't hurt. Fortunately, this emphasis on what The American People want
is an obsession which all parties to the electoral sham have in common.
For better and for worse, a mandate from the American People is
tantamount to a call from God, so they are now free to level Fallujah
and tick off the other targets on their wish list. However,
like true warriors, the election for these crazies is no more than a
blip on the screen, a hiccup on the road to world domination. What is
the true fascist reaction to the recent news that your invasion has
killed 100,000? Why, to prepare to kill another hundred thousand, of
course. Remember Kissinger's chilling exchange on the Nixon tapes where
they casually discussed how many would die if they ordered the bombing
of the dikes in the north of So,
while American voters fret and fuss over the tiny problem of whether or
not the will of the people actually matters, plans are on track to snuff
out the breath of the people by the thousands oh-so-far away. The
indifference to this coming massacre is as brutal as it is astounding.
It's no wonder that the more “esoteric” issue of depleted uranium
dust doesn't register on the radar screens. Most Americans cant even
muster the courage to say that the pending Fallujah massacre is wrong. A
recent segment on NPR, that bastion of liberal media, had pundits
discussing how best to incinerate a city of 300,000. Would air power be
most efficient, or would house-to-house combat be necessary? Hmmm . . .
now that's a puzzler! Deaf
to the coming terror for the residents of Fallujah, and blind to its
inevitable consequences, we watch (or mostly, don't) as air strikes
reduce the small A
nervous habit of mine is to replay a song over and over in my head, like
a musical worry stone. The past couple days it has been Bob Dylan's
"God On Our Side." And not for nothing. Some of the troops
poised to pounce on Fallujah were praying to Jesus and playing Christian
rock. Colonel Gary Brandl of the United States Marine Corps commented:
"The enemy has a face. It is Satan's. He is in Fallujah, and we are
going to destroy him." The sheer terrifying stupidity of these commanders is reflected in the mentality of those up the chain (obviously--hence Gitmo and Abu Ghraib). A recent eye opener came from an interview of a Bush aide by Ron Suskind. The aide waxed philosophical about the great divide between those who make reality (Bush and his angels, I suppose), and those who simply study it. He actually used the term “reality-based community,” which I find pretty fitting and ironic in a strange way. I have always considered the fascist core of the Bush junta to be on the other side of a reality divide--I just didn't mean it in quite the same way. It
isn't really that funny, when you think about it. This is psychosis, a
sort of mass hysteria which has sucked in tens of millions of Americans.
The election, the votes, the campaign--it's all largely irrelevant
anyway, to be perfectly honest--a colossal waste of time and money.
Before a single vote was cast, the future of the And
the Americans are already on their way. The slaughter at Fallujah will
be a watershed event in the collapse of the American empire, echoing
across the next hundred years. This is hardly hyperbole; the world is
already sick of
Sometimes my habit goes into overdrive, and the songs form a medley in my head. Dylan asks, “how many deaths will it take ‘til he knows?” An upswell of hope convinces me that we might still avoid the slide into hell that seems our due, and the Sandinista hymn reminds me: “Nuestro pueblo es el dueño de su historia/Architecto de su liberación.” It doesn't last long, and Paul Simon's cynical ballad brings me back to the “reality-based” community: “God bless the goods we were given/And God bless the US of A/God bless our standard of living/--Let's keep it that way/Have a good tiiiiiime?” Writer, singer, linguist and activist Daniel Patrick Welch lives and writes in Salem, Massachusetts, with his wife, Julia Nambalirwa-Lugudde. Together they run The Greenhouse School. His website is at danielpwelch.com. |