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date: Tue, 27 Nov 2007 07:18:27 GMT,
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Amerika's Day of Reckoning: More on Buchanan's New Book
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Amerika's Day of Reckoning: More on Buchanan's New Book
Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit
Counterpunch - Nov 26, 2007
http://www.counterpunch.org/roberts11262007.html
America's Days of Reckoning
Good-Bye to All That
By PAUL CRAIG ROBERTS
Pat Buchanan is too patriotic to come right out and say it, but the
message of his new book, "Day of Reckoning," is that America as we have
known her is finished. Moreover, Naomi Wolf agrees with him. These two
writers of different political persuasions arrive at America's demise
from different directions.
Buchanan explains how hubris, ideology, and greed have torn America
apart. A neoconservative cabal with an alien agenda captured the Bush
administration and committed American blood, energy, and money to
aggression against Muslim countries in the Middle East, while
permitting America's domestic borders to be overrun by immigrants and
exporting the jobs that had made the US an opportunity society. War and
offshoring have taken a savage economic toll while open borders and
diversity have created social and political division.
In her new book, "End of America: Letter of Warning to a Young Patriot,"
Wolf explains America's demise in terms of the erosion of freedoms. She
writes that the ten classic steps that are used to close open societies
are currently being taken in the US. Martial law is only a declaration
away.
The Bush administration responded to September 11 by initiating
military aggression in the Middle East and by using fear and the "war
on terror" to implement police state measures at home with legislation,
presidential directives, and executive orders
Overnight the US became a tyranny in which people could be arrested and
incarcerated on the basis of unsubstantiated accusation. Both US
citizens and non-citizens were denied habeas corpus, due process, and
access to attorneys and courts. Congress gave Bush legislation
establishing military tribunals, the procedures of which permit people
to be condemned to death on the basis of secret evidence, hearsay, and
confessions extracted by torture. Nothing of the like has ever been
seen before in the US.
The cancer might have metastasized if the Guantanamo detainees had
actually been the dangerous terrorists and enemy combatants that the
Bush regime declared them to be. Had the administration actually
possessed evidence against the detainees, the Bush regime might have
succeeded in dispensing with the Constitution. Conviction of the
detainees could have led to what Wolf calls a "fascist expansion."
Following the exercise of its new powers, the regime could have
broadened the definition of terrorist to include the regime's critics,
thus pulling citizens in general into tribunals devoid of civil liberty
protections.
It could still turn out this way in the event of another 9/11 attack,
whether real or orchestrated. But momentarily the drive toward tyranny
has been blunted, because the vast majority of detainees turned out to
be hapless individuals sold into American captivity by warlords
responding to the bounty the US paid for "terrorists." Any unprotected
individual was vulnerable to being captured by Afghan and Pakistani
warlords and sold as a "terrorist." The Americans needed to show
results, and the Bush regime needed "terrorists" in order to feed the
fear its propaganda had generated.
In Stalinist Russia or Nazi Germany, the absence of evidence would not
have mattered as the judicial system produced the results demanded by
the tyrants. However, the US military had not been sufficiently
corrupted for the Bush regime's Guantanamo agenda to succeed. Honorable
officers, such as Lt. Col. Stephen Abraham, were able to discern that
the US government had no information on the detainees and used
interrogations in order to rubber stamp the a priori determination that
a detainee was a terrorist or enemy combatant. Military officers made
these revelations known to real courts before the tribunal process
could establish itself.
CounterPunch writer Andy Worthington's recently published book, "The
Guantanamo Files: The Stories of the 759 Detainees in America's Illegal
Prison," proves that the regime's claim that it had hundreds of
dangerous terrorists at Guantanamo was just another Bush administration
lie.
Currently, support for Bush, Cheney, and the neoconservative agenda is
low. However, Congress, the press, and elections have proven to be
feeble opponents of the Bush regime's drive toward war and tyranny. It
remains to be seen whether the regime has sufficient credibility or
audacity to initiate war with Iran or a false flag attack that would
revive the fascist expansion of which Naomi Wolf warns.
The Bush administration has been a catastrophe. Its failures are
unprecedented. Energy prices are at all time highs. The US is deeply in
debt and dependent on foreign creditors. The dollar has lost 60 per
cent of its value against other tradable currencies, and its reserve
currency status, the basis of American power, is in doubt. The US has
lost millions of middle class jobs which have been replaced with low
paid domestic service jobs. Except for the very rich, Americans have
experienced no gains in real income in the 21st century. As the ladders
of upward mobility are dismantled and the middle class struggles and
fails, America is left with a few rich and many poor. America's
reputation and credibility are damaged perhaps beyond repair. Congress
and the press have enabled the executive branch's disregard of the
Constitution and civil liberty. The US is mired in two lost wars which
are pushing Lebanon and nuclear-armed Pakistan into deepening political
crises.
As Buchanan concludes, "Our day of reckoning is at hand."
[Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the
Reagan administration. He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street
Journal editorial page and Contributing Editor of National Review. He
is coauthor of The Tyranny of Good Intentions.He can be reached at:
PaulCraigRoberts@yahoo.com ]
*
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date: Tue, 27 Nov 2007 02:34:02 GMT
author: unknown
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War Paint and Lawyers: Rainforest Indians versus Big Oil - 11/27 BBC
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War Paint and Lawyers: Rainforest Indians versus Big Oil - 11/27 BBC
Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit
sent by Greg Palast - Nov 26, 2007
http://www.GregPalast.com
War Paint and Lawyers: Rainforest Indians versus Big Oil
Greg Palast investigates for BBC Newsnight
Tuesday, November 27, 2007 - 10:30pm GMT [5:30pm New York Time] -
Chevron: "Nobody has proved that crude causes cancer."
live on BBC2 TV or on the net at
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/newsnight/default.stm
BBC Television Newsnight has been able to get close-in film of a
new Cofan Indian ritual deep in the heart of the Amazonian rainforest.
Known as "The Filing of the Law Suit," natives of Ecuador's jungle,
decked in feathers and war paint and heavily armed with lawyers,
are filmed presenting a new complaint in their litigation seeking
$12 billion from Chevron Inc., the international oil goliath.
It would all be a poignant joke - except that the indigenous tribe
is suddenly the odds-on favorite to defeat the oil company known
for naming its largest tanker, "Condoleezza," after former Chevron
director, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.
For Newsnight, reporter Greg Palast, steps (somewhat inelegantly)
into a dug-out log canoe to seek out the Cofan in their rainforest
village to investigate their allegations. Palast discovers stinking
pits of old oil drilling residue leaking into drinking water - and
meets farmers whose limbs are covered in pustules.
The Cofan's leader, Emergildo Criollo, tells Palast that when Texaco
Oil, now part of Chevron, came to the village in 1972, it obtained
permission to drill by offering the Indians candy and cheese. The
indigenous folk threw the funny-selling cheese into the jungle.
Criollo says his three-year son died from oil contamination after,
"He went swimming, then began vomiting blood."
Flying out of the rainforest, past the Andes volcanoes, Palast gets
the other side of the story in Ecuador's capitol, Quito. "It's the
largest fraud in history!" asserts Chevron lawyer Jaime Varela
reacting to the Cofan law suits against his company. Chevron-Texaco,
Varela insists, cleaned up all its contaminated oil pits when it
abandoned the country nearly 15 years ago - except those pits it
left in the hands of Ecuador's own state oil company.
What about the Indian kids dying of cancer? Texaco lawyer Rodrigo
Perez asks, "And itbs the only case of cancer in the world? How
many cases of children with cancer do you have in the States, in
Europe, in Quito? If there is somebody with cancer there, [the
Cofan parents] must prove [the deaths were] caused by crude or by
petroleum industry. And, second, they have to prove that it is OUR
crude b which is absolutely impossible." The Texaco man stated,
"Scientifically, nobody has proved that crude causes cancer."
Even if the Indians can prove their case and win billions to clean
up the jungle, collecting the cash is another matter. Chevron has
removed all its assets from Ecuador.
But, this week, the political planet tilts toward the natives as
Alberto Acosta takes office as President of Ecuador's new Constitutional
Assembly. Newsnight catches up with Acosta - who gives Chevron a
tongue-lashing. "Chevron is responsible for environmental and
social destruction in the Amazon. And thatbs why theybre on trial."
"He LOVES Chavez"
Little Ecuador does not seem like much of a match against big Chevron
- - whose revenue exceeds the entire GDP of the Andean nation.
However, behind Little Ecuador is Huge Venezuela - and its
larger-than-life leader, Hugo Chavez. "Acosta," complains one
local pundit to the BBC, "loves - LOVES - Chavez."
And apparently, the feeling is mutual. That is, Chavez sees in
Ecuador's new government, which won election campaigning to the
tune of the Twisted Sister hit, We're Not Gonna Take it Anymore, a
new ally in his fight with George Bush over control of Latin hearts
and minds - and energy.
Chevron-Texaco's largest new oil reserves are in Venezuela; Venezuela
stands with Ecuador; and Ecuador now stands with its "affectados,"
the Indians and farmers claiming the poisons in their bodies trace
right back to the Texaco star.
Suddenly, the David-versus-Goliath story of Little Indians versus
Big Oil is becoming part of the larger conflict between Uncle Sam
and Uncle Hugo. The outcome is now a cliff-hanger. Indeed, Newsnight
has learned that this month, Chevron will face a new legal challenge
by Cofan attorneys before US securities regulators to investigate
whether the company has fully disclosed to shareholders the massive
potential legal liability from the equatorial Rumble in the Jungle.
Watch the story live on BBC2 or, in the US, after broadcast on the net
at http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/newsnight/default.stm
or via a link from http://www.GregPalast.com
WARNING: The day's news events may require Newsnight to delay
broadcast to another evening.
And this weekend, catch Palast discussing the BBC Report with
environmental crusader Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on RFK's Air America
Radio program, Ring of Fire.
And pick [up] a copy of "Ecuador: Oiled and Despoiled," one of the
documentary shorts on Palast's DVD film collection, The Assassination
of Hugo Chavez, released this week. Available only by making a
tax-deductible donation to The Palast Investigative Fund at
http://www.PalastInvestigativeFund.org
BBC Television Newsnight story filmed in Ecuador by Rick Rowley,
edited by Jacquie Shoohen in New York, produced in London by Meirion
Jones, written and reported from Ecuador by Greg Palast.
*
=================================================================
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Since 1985 - Information for the Rest of Us
Our main website: http://www.blythe.org
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Subscribe: http://blythe-systems.com/mailman/listinfo/nytr
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date: Tue, 27 Nov 2007 07:18:27 GMT
author: unknown
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