James Risen, who won the Pulitzer Prize in 2005 for exposing the NSA warrantless eavesdropping program, has long been one of the nation’s most aggressive and adversarial investigative journalists. Over the past several years, he has received at least as much attention for being threatened with prison by the Obama Justice Department (ostensibly) for refusing to reveal the source of one of his stories—a persecution that, in reality, is almost certainly the vindictive by-product of the U.S. government’s anger over his NSA reporting.
He has published a new book on the War on Terror entitled Pay Any Price: Greed, Power and Endless War. There have been lots of critiques of the War on Terror on its own terms, but Risen’s is one of the first to offer large amounts of original reporting on what is almost certainly the most overlooked aspect of this war: the role corporate profiteering plays in ensuring its endless continuation, and how the beneficiaries use rank fear-mongering to sustain it.
That alone makes the book very worth reading, but what independently interests me about Risen is how he seems to have become entirely radicalized by what he’s discovered in the last decade of reporting, as well as by the years-long battle he has had to wage with the U.S. government to stay out of prison. He now so often eschews the modulated, safe, uncontroversial tones of the standard establishment reporter (such as when he called Obama “the greatest enemy of press freedom in a generation” and said about the administration’s press freedom attacks: “Nice to see the U.S. government is becoming more like the Iranian government”). He at times even channels radical thinkers, sounding almost Chomsky-esque when he delivered a multiple–tweet denunciation—taken from a speech he delivered at Colby College—of how establishment journalists cling to mandated orthodoxies out of fear:
It is difficult to recognize the limits a society places on accepted thought at the time it is doing it. When everyone accepts basic assumptions, there don’t seem to be constraints on ideas. That truth often only reveals itself in hindsight. Today, the basic prerequisite to being taken seriously in American politics is to accept the legitimacy of the new national security state. The new basic American assumption is that there really is a need for a global war on terror. Anyone who doesn’t accept that basic assumption is considered dangerous and maybe even a traitor. The crackdown on leaks by the Obama administration has been designed to suppress the truth about the war on terror. Stay on the interstate highway of conventional wisdom with your journalism, and you will have no problems. Try to get off and challenge basic assumptions, and you will face punishment.
I spent roughly 30 minutes talking to Risen about the book, what he’s endured in his legal case, attacks on press freedoms, and what is and is not new about the War on Terror’s corporate profiteering. The discussion can be heard on the player below, and a transcript is provided. As Risen put it: “I wrote Pay Any Price as my answer to the government’s campaign against me.”
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GREENWALD: This is Glenn Greenwald with The Intercept and I am speaking today with Jim Risen, the Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter for The New York Times who has released a new book, the title of which is Pay Any Price: Greed, Power, and Endless War. Hey Jim, thanks so much for taking some time to talk to me.
RISEN: Thanks for having me. I appreciate it.
GREENWALD: My pleasure. So, I’ve read your entire book, and I have several questions about it, beginning with a general one, which is: there have been a lot of books written about the failures of the War on Terror, deceit kind of embedded with the War on Terror, most of which have taken the war on its own terms, and critiqued it because of strategic failures or of failure to achieve the claims which have been made to justify the war, and I actually have written a couple of books myself about the War on Terror from that perspective. Yours is really one of the first that has focused on a particular part of the War on Terror, namely the way in which economic motives, what you call the Homeland Security Industrial Complex, has driven a huge part of the war, and there’s a lot of new reporting about how that functions.
I wanted to ask you two things about that. One is, is that something that you intended to do; that you set out to do when you began writing the book, and if so, what led you to do that, and the second part of it is, how much of this economic motive is the cause of the fact that we’ve now been at war for 13 years as opposed to traditional war objectives such as increasing domestic power or asserting foreign influence. How big of a role do you think it actually plays?
RISEN: That was my goal. That was one of the key objectives of writing the book, and I think it plays a really central role in why the war is continuing. I think it’s basically that after so many years there’s a whole class of people that have developed. A post-9/11 mercenary class that’s developed that have invested in their own lives an incentive to keep the war going. Not just people who are making money, but people who are in the government who their status and their power within the government are invested in continuing the war.
So I was trying to show that it wasn’t just greed—it was partly greed—but it was also status, and power, and ambition that all intertwined to make it so that there’s very little debate about whether to continue the war, and whether we should have any real re-assessment on a basic level. So you’re right, I was trying to get at those motivations, I was trying to understand how we could have this prolonged period of war with such little debate. And I think it’s both economic incentives and personal power incentives and ambition and status.
GREENWALD: Let’s talk about the economic part of the motive, because obviously one of the most striking things about the war is not just its duration but the fact that it’s continued essentially unimpeded, notwithstanding these wild swings in election outcomes. You have the Republicans, who were in power when the war commenced, get smashed in 2006 and 2008 as a result of, at least primarily, as a result of dissatisfaction with the war in Iraq and the general state of things, but then you had the war continue under a president who kind of vowed to reign it all in, and then even when the Democrats get killed in 2010 and then again in 2014, there’s no signs of any of this letting up.
It’s easy to see why there’s this private sector—you know, the weapons manufacturers and the defense contractors, sort of a General Dynamics, Booz Allen world—that want the war to continue. They do really well when they’re selling huge amounts of machinery, weapons, and drones. But what causes the political class to be so willing to serve their interests so brazenly, even when public opinion is so overwhelmingly against it?
RISEN: That’s a question I’ve struggled with myself. I’ve tried to understand. I think we had one or two real moments when we could have gone in a different direction. The primary one was, of course, 2008. I think Obama had a chance. He had a mandate to do something different. And he didn’t do it. I think part of it was that he was never exactly what we thought he was, I think he was never really as liberal as people thought he was. I think a lot of voters invested in him their hopes and dreams without exactly realizing what he really was. I think he was always really more conservative than how he presented himself in 2008.
To give him a little bit of the benefit of the doubt, I think it’s very easy for the intelligence community to scare the hell out of politicians when they come in, and I think that Obama probably got seduced a little bit by the intelligence community when he arrived. All you have to do is look at a lot of raw intelligence to scare somebody. Convince them that “Oh, it’s much worse than you ever realized.” But at the same time, he must take some of the blame. He surrounded himself with a lot of the Bush people from the get-go. Brennan was on his campaign. Most of his team had some ties to the Bush years in the War on Terror.
To me, that’s the hardest thing to really sort out, the factors that led Obama—at that one moment, I think there was one opportunity he had in 2008 to make a significant change and he didn’t do it. And I think historians are going to be struggling with that for a long time.
GREENWALD: Well, let me struggle with that with you for a little bit because the idea, and I think it’s a commonly expressed one—there’s probably an element of truth to it—that a new president who doesn’t really have a great deal of experience with the military or the intelligence community has these impressive generals and CIA people coming in with medals on their chest and decades of experience and, as you say, purposefully scaring them.
But at the same time, anybody who’s remotely sophisticated about the world understands that that’s going to happen. Dwight Eisenhower warned of the military industrial complex 50 years ago. And you know that there are factions in Washington who maintain their power by scaring you, and you have your own advisors. If you and I know that so much of that is fear mongering, he has to know, right?
RISEN: Right, and I’m not trying to excuse it at all, and in fact I think it’s what he wanted. My own gut tells me that what he decided to do was in early 2009 was to focus on economic and healthcare policies and that in order to do those things on the domestic side, he had to protect his flank on national security and not fight the Republicans on national security, so I think there was a calculated move by Obama to prolong the War on Terror in order to try to focus on domestic issues. And I think that after a while, he lost control of that narrative.
GREENWALD: It’s always hard to talk about somebody’s motives, right? I think we have a hard time knowing our own motives, let alone other people’s, who are complicated. As you say, he had this great opportunity in 2008 because things like closing Guantanamo and reining in the War on Terror and stopping torture—these were all things that he ran on, and won on, right?
RISEN: Right.
GREENWALD: And you’ve been really outspoken about the fact that it’s not just the continuation of the Bush national security agenda but the even—especially, rather—an escalation of the attack on journalism. I’ve seen you have some pretty extreme quotes on that, that he’s the worst president on press freedom since at least Nixon, maybe worse. Do you think that’s a byproduct of the fact that every president gets progressively worse, or do you think there’s something unique and specific about his worldview and approach that has made him so bad on these press freedom issues?
RISEN: I think one of his legacies is going to be that on a broad scale he normalized the War on Terror. He took what Bush and Cheney kind of had started on an emergency, ad-hoc basis and turned it into a permanent state and allowed it to grow much more dramatically than it ever had under Bush or Cheney, and part of that—I think within that—was his attack on whistleblowers and journalists. I think it’s all part and parcel of the same thing. If you believe in the national security state in the way Obama does, then you have to also believe in squashing dissent.
GREENWALD: And I think that’s part of what makes war so degrading, right, for a political culture and a country is that it always gets accompanied by those kinds of things. Let me ask you a little bit about your own personal experience as part of that war on whistleblowing and journalism.
I know you’re a little constrained because your case is still pending. But one of the things I always find so interesting is that whenever your case is talked about, it always gets talked about in this very narrow sense: that you had a source for a story that you published in your book about some inept and ultimately counterproductive attempts to infiltrate the Iranian nuclear program and the case is about trying to force you to reveal your source, and like every good journalist should, you refuse to do so and therefore face a possibility of being held in contempt of court and being sent to prison.
But the background of your case, that I want to just step back and talk about a little bit, is that you’ve had this very adversarial relationship with the intelligence community, this increasingly adversarial relationship with the intelligence community, as a result of a lot of the reporting that you did, including exposing the warrantless NSA program in 2005, for which you won the Pulitzer Prize.
Can you talk about that, the tensions you’ve had with the government in the War on Terror reporting that you’ve done and how that has manifested and affected your life?
RISEN: Yeah, sure. In fact, I’ve said in affidavits in the case that I believe that the reason they came after me on this subpoena is because of the NSA stories that we did for The New York Times. I’m convinced, and I believe there’s a lot of evidence to show that they decided ultimately not to come after The New York Times on the NSA stories and instead wanted to isolate me by looking at something in my book. In fact, I know for a fact that they conducted leak investigations of at least three or four separate chapters in my book.
They interviewed a lot of people about totally unrelated things to the case that they ultimately came after me on and I think they were looking for something in my book to isolate me from The New York Times, and in their court papers they have repeatedly cited the fact that The New York Times decided not to run the story as one of the arguments for why it’s justified for them to come after me on it. And so I pride myself on the fact that I developed an adversarial relationship with the government because I think that’s what every reporter should do.
GREENWALD: I know from my own experience doing NSA reporting over the last 18 months—and I’ve heard you say before that you’re not going to let these kind of threats and recriminations affect your reporting. That was my mindset as well and I was actually even more determined a lot of times whenever I felt threatened to do the reporting even more aggressively, to make sure that those bullying tactics weren’t going to work. At the same time, when you hear top level government officials openly muse about the crimes that you’ve committed, when you hear privately through your attorney that the Justice Department might arrest you when you come back to the U.S., of course it does have an effect on you. It occupies a mental space. You spend a lot of time talking to your lawyers instead of focusing on journalism.
And one of the things I’ve always found so fascinating about your case is that you have a Pulitzer, you work for The New York Times, you’re one of the best known investigative journalists in the country—one of the most institutionally protected, even though they did separate you from the Times by focusing on your book. Still, though, the fact that they were able to target you this way, for this many years, I thought was a very powerful message that if we can even go after Jim Risen, we can go after anybody.
I know you want to maintain the idea, and I know that it’s true, that none of this consciously deterred you from doing the journalism. But how does being at the center of a case like this, where people are openly talking about you going to prison, including people in the Justice Department—how does this have an effect on your journalism, on your relationship to your sources, just on your ability to do your work?
RISEN: Well, you know, it’s interesting. It affected me a lot at first, for the first couple of years. It’s one of those weird things that I’m sure you know now—these things go on forever and they take a long time and most of the time nobody’s paying any attention except you and your lawyers. During the first several years, nobody paid much attention, and it did have an effect on me then. And it took a long time for me to realize I’ve got to just keep going. But the fact that now a lot of people are supporting me has really helped me, this year in particular.
In the last six months to a year, when I’ve gotten a lot more attention and people supporting me, I feel like now I have to represent the industry, represent the profession, and so it’s changed the way I even think about the case.
GREENWALD: You have become this kind of increasingly prolific user of Twitter, out of nowhere. You were never on Twitter. You were a very late joiner. I clearly see all the signs of addiction forming, and I say this as someone who recognizes it personally. You’ve evolved—you had a Twitter egg for a long time, and now you have a real picture.
RISEN: (Laughs) My son took that picture.
GREENWALD: (Laughs) Alright, well I knew it was going to be somebody else who caused you to leave the egg behind. But one of the things I find really interesting is Twitter is a venue in which you get to speak in a different way about different things than you do, say, in an article that you write for The New York Times, where you’re a little bit more constrained in how you’re talking. And you’ve expressed some ideas that I think are very rare for someone who is a reporter at a large, establishment institution like The New York Times to express, and I want to ask you a couple of questions about that.
You had this multi-part tweet maybe about a month ago. It almost sounded like something Noam Chomsky might say, or other people might say like that, about how the big plague of establishment thought in the U.S. is a fear of deviating from conventional wisdom, and it’s only after generation or two later when people who do that get vindicated, and so there’s this really strong incentive not to do that. Can you elaborate on the kinds of things you were talking about that and what you’ve experienced that has led you to see those things?
RISEN: That was actually part of a speech I gave at Colby College. I think the best thing I’ve written on this whole issue. I compared how Elijah Lovejoy, who was an abolitionist in the 1830s who was murdered because he was trying to run a newspaper in St. Louis that was pro-abolitionism, how he was so far ahead of his time that people thought he was crazy. He was so far outside the mainstream, and people thought abolitionism and the end of slavery was this idea that was insane.
And I was trying to compare that to what we have today, where anybody who says we shouldn’t have a War on Terror is considered delusional. And I was trying to show that conventional wisdom is a creature of our time. It’s not inherently true or not true. And that the mainstream press’s dependence on conventional wisdom ultimately cripples it in a lot of different ways.
GREENWALD: The impression that I have, and I’ve known you personally only for a few years, so it’s more just a speculative observation from having seen your work before that is that a combination of your going through this case with the government where your own liberty is very much at risk as a result of the government’s actions, combined with a lot of the reporting that lead to this book kind of has radicalized you in a way that I think is a pretty common thing that people in the War on Terror have gone through where people look at their country differently, much more so than they ever did before, look at institutions differently.
Am I right about that? Is the Jim Risen of today more willing to experiment with novel ideas that aren’t conventional than the Jim Risen of 20 years ago as a result of those experiences?
RISEN: Probably, probably. I have to think about that. I’m trying to think back. I think my real change came after 9/11 and the invasion of Iraq. I was covering the CIA as a beat then. And to me, it was fascinating talking to CIA people right after the invasion of Iraq and right before the invasion of Iraq, because it was kind of like privately talking to a bunch of Howard Deans. They were all radicalized against what Bush was doing.
To me it was wild to hear all of these people inside the intelligence community, especially in 2003, 2004, who were just going nuts. They couldn’t believe the radical change the United States was going through, and that nobody was opposed to it. And that led me to write my last book, State of War, because I was hearing things from within the intelligence community and the U.S. government that you weren’t hearing publicly from anybody. So that really led me to realize—and to step back and look at—the radical departure of U.S. policy that has happened since 9/11 and since the invasion of Iraq.
To me, it’s not like I’ve been radicalized, I feel like I stayed in the same place and the country changed. The country became more radicalized in a different direction.
GREENWALD: I wonder about that a lot. Obviously, I started writing about politics in 2005, and a huge part of it was that perception, that the country had radically changed, that things that we took for granted were no longer the case, and I’ve definitely had a rapid and significant evolution in my views of how I look at those things the more I focus on them and the more the country changed.
But if you go back and look at some media critics of the ’50s and ’60s, people like I.F. Stone who were kind of placed on the outside of conventional wisdom, and were viewed as fringe or crazy at the time—a lot of that can be traced to way before 9/11. Lies about the Vietnam War. The huge military industrial complex around the Cold War. Do you think 9/11 was this radical break from how things were done in the country, or was it more an injection of steroids into processes that were already underway?
RISEN: There have always been problems. But we’ve taken this to a new level. Both because the technology has allowed the government to do things it would never have done before, but also because of the willingness of the country to accept security measures and a reduction in civil liberties that I think would not have been contemplated before. I keep thinking that if you had a Rip Van Winkle from 1995 who woke up today, I don’t think they would really recognize the country. And that’s what I’m trying to write about, and what I view, because that’s the America that I remember.
GREENWALD: There’s this fascinating debate that took place in the ’90s, after the Timothy McVeigh attack on the Oklahoma City federal building, when the Clinton administration introduced these proposals to require backdoors into all encryption, for all computers and internet usage. And it didn’t happen, and the reason it didn’t happen is because all of these Republicans in Congress, led by John Ashcroft, stood up with a bunch of Democrats in alliance with them, saying “We’re not the kind of country that gives the government access to all of our communications. Privacy is actually a crucial value.” And just a few short years later, all of that reversed, and that debate became inconceivable.
RISEN: When Dick Cheney said, “the gloves come off,” I don’t think we realized how important that was, and what that really meant. As I’ve said before, that really meant, “We’re going to deregulate national security, and we’re going to take off all the rules that were imposed in the ’70s after Watergate.” And that was just a dramatic change in the way we conduct foreign policy and national security. And I think it’s been extended to this whole new homeland security apparatus. People think that terrorism is an existential threat, even though it’s not, and so they’re willing to go along with all this, and that’s what’s so scary to me.
GREENWALD: Let me ask you a few questions about some specific examples in your book, including one that relates to what you just said. You kind of have these different wars that you conceive of and one is called the “War on Normalcy.” One of the examples is, there’s this area on the U.S.-Canadian border that used to be kind of tranquil and now there’s a ton of War on Terror money that has gone to the state police there, and it’s kind of militarized that zone, and made it so the citizens are just interfered with in all kinds of ways.
One of the most overlooked trends, I think—you mentioned Cheney taking the gloves off—all of these things we were doing overseas aimed at ostensibly foreign terrorists have now begun to be imported onto U.S. soil, like the militarization of our police force using techniques from Baghdad, the use of drones, that “Collect it All” NSA model, which was first pioneered by Keith Alexander in Baghdad, is now aimed at U.S. citizens. Do you think that’s an important trend? Is that something that’s really happened, that what was the War on Terror aimed outward is now being aimed domestically?
RISEN: Absolutely, and that’s one of the most scary elements of it. To me, when the NSA started spying domestically that was like Caesar crossing the Rubicon. It was a really important shift. People thought that was absolutely forbidden. And when the NSA started doing it, and then when you started fooling around with creating a new Department of Homeland Security, merging all of these departments—creating Immigration and Customs Enforcement and all of this stuff—I think you’ve created a much more efficient federal domestic law enforcement apparatus, and efficiency is not always a good thing when it comes to that.
One of the things I always think about, and one of my earlier books was comparing the CIA and the KGB during the Cold War, and I always remember somebody telling me that the only countries that have really efficient security services are dictatorships.
GREENWALD: Right, and you can basically only have a really efficient security service if you’re willing to at least kind of go into that realm of authoritarianism—they kind of go hand in hand. Let me ask you: there’s this pretty new reporting you have on this company General Atomics, which is the maker of drones, and you kind of describe them as the new oligarchs. In 2001 they had $100 million in government contracts and now in 2012 they have $1.8 billion, an obscene increase. At the same time, coincidentally enough, you cite a good governance group documenting that they’ve spent more to fund congressional staff travel than any other company.
One of the things that always amazes me—I remember that there was this reporting that was done by Wired, during the debate over whether to give immunity to the telecoms that participated in the NSA program that you uncovered. An extraordinary thing to do, to retroactively immunize the biggest companies in the United States, and Sen. Jay Rockefeller became the leading spokesman for it at the time. He was the Democratic chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, and there were studies showing that right around the time when he became the leading proponent of telecom immunity, AT&T, Verizon, and Sprint began donating lots of money to his campaign, they threw parties for him, but still, in the context of Jay Rockefeller—a Rockefeller—with a super safe seat in West Virginia, they were pretty trivial amounts to be able to just dominate congressional policy that way. And that was what struck me too about General Atomics. So they fund some congressional staff travel.
What is it about the D.C. culture that lets these kind of seemingly trivial amounts in the scheme of things end up translating into this massive influence?
RISEN: You know, I don’t think that it’s the money that really does the trick. I think what really, you’ve got to look at is that all of the staffers, and all of the members of Congress are thinking about what are they going to do after they leave those jobs. The same is true for military officers. What are you going to do when you retire from the military, or from the House Intelligence Committee, or whatever? You’re going to need a job at a defense contractor. And so I think that the real incentive for a lot of these people is not to upset their potential employers in the future. The campaign contributions themselves are just tokens, as you said.
GREENWALD: To say that, on one hand it seems kind of self-evident, but on the one hand, it’s a pretty extraordinary observation because it’s a form of the most extreme corruption. Public officials are serving the interests of really rich corporations in exchange for lucrative private sector jobs that they get when they leave after serving their interests.
RISEN: What really hit home was when I was working on a chapter on KBR, and one of the guys who I describe was kind of a whistleblower, Charles Smith. He was an auditor for the army who tried to stop about a billion dollars of payments to KBR because they didn’t have any proof that they’d actually spent the money—or they didn’t have sufficient records to prove it—and he lost his job over his fight with KBR, he believes.
And after I started talking to him he said, “There’s this one general you could talk to who was one of my bosses for a while. He was a good guy and he would vouch for me.” So I called that general, and he had since retired, and he said, “Well, I think Charlie was a great guy, but I now work for a contractor that does business with KBR, and I don’t want to say anything publicly about Charlie because that might upset KBR.” And that’s the kind of thing that you see all the time.
GREENWALD: There’s a case that you talk about in the book that’s Burnett v. Al Baraka, where 9/11 families sued the Saudis. There are lots of influential people in D.C., like Sen. Bob Graham, the former head of the Senate Armed Services Committee, and others, who have said that the role that the Saudis have played in the War on Terror, and specifically the 9/11 attack, has been really actively suppressed, because of the U.S. alliance with Saudi Arabia. And there is this sort of bizarre aspect that we’ve gone to war against a huge number of countries, one of the few exceptions to which has been the country that had the most nationals involved in that attack, and whose government has been the most persuasively implicated.
How persuasive or credible do you find those questions about the Saudi involvement in the War on Terror generally, 9/11 specifically, and whether that’s been actively suppressed?
RISEN: Well, as you said, I don’t really get into the substance of that in that chapter because it’s really about this bizarre operation and how crazy that operation became. But I think you’re right. I think it’s one of the unanswered questions of 9/11 that, as you said, Graham became fixated on, and they still have not unredacted parts of that report.
I think the role of the Saudi government is probably different from the role of wealthy people in the Persian Gulf. And that’s the distinction that people have tried to grapple with for a long time. Are these just individually wealthy people in the Gulf, either in Saudi Arabia or in the Emirates, or is there some direction from any of these governments? And that’s the question that the U.S. government has never wanted to address publicly.
GREENWALD: You said in an interview within the last week—it might have been at the Firedog Lake Book Salon, I’m not exactly sure where it was—but you described the period of time in 2004 and 2005 when you were trying to get the NSA eavesdropping story published as one of the most stressful times of your life. I think you even said the quote “most stressful period of your professional life.” The New York Times, to its credit, did eventually publish that story, and did a great job on it, but can you talk a little bit about what you meant by that? Why that period was so stressful?
RISEN: Eric Lichtblau and I were trying to get that in the paper beginning in October 2004, and they killed it, or they stopped it. They agreed with the White House not to run it before the election and then we tried again after the election, and they killed it again, and by that time it was pretty well dead. So I went on a book leave and I put it in my book, and I knew that by doing that, I was putting my career at The New York Times in jeopardy.
It was very stressful about what was going to happen between me, The New York Times, and the Bush administration. I really credit my wife more than anybody else. I told her at one point that if I do this, if I keep it in the book, and the Times doesn’t run it, I’m probably going to get fired, and I remember she told me, “I won’t respect you if you don’t do that.” And so that was enough for me to keep going, but I didn’t sleep for about six months.
GREENWALD: It’s got to be incredibly difficult knowing that you have a story of that magnitude, and that the story has been nailed down and you can’t get it out into the world. Your book, which I literally finished reading about 24 hours ago, is really riveting, and it’s not just a book that is a polemical indictment of the War on Terror, like you’ve read before, it really is an incredible amount of individual reporting on one of the most under-reported aspects of this war, which is just how many people are gorging on huge amounts of profit and waste at the expense of the taxpayer, and what a big part of the war that is. Congratulations on writing such a great book, and I really appreciate your talking to me.
RISEN: Well thank you.
Photo: Alex Menendez/AP


Speaking of fascism, check out this link for theilitsry’s intelligence arm and how ‘small businesses’ can participate in covert projects too!
https://www.inscom.army.mil/Organization/micecp.aspx
Or you can also check out some of their research activities below:
http://www.wpafb.af.mil/shared/media/document/AFD-070418-032.pdf
Sorry for typos! When designing new comment section, please include chance to edit.
THE//INTERCEPT is slowly losing direction. I am having difficulty figuring out why it exists and what it is going to achieve. There does not appear to be a coherent theme for the various stories except an overpoweringly pessimistic one that I can discern – that the government of USA is very powerful and resourceful, and that it is in different ways trying to harm many, if not all, of its citizens and rest of the world outside. There may be some truth in it, but a newspaper cannot keep on harping on this one theme alone and hope to retain its readership. I think the management of this newspaper needs to provide proper direction to its staff or else it will soon become the most boring and predictable website on the internet. Moreover, Omidyar is a businessman and unless he gets back some of his investments it’s unlikely that he will perpetuate his philanthropy.
“……that the government of USA is very powerful and resourceful, and that it is in different ways trying to harm many, if not all, of its citizens and rest of the world outside. There may be some truth in it, but a newspaper cannot keep on harping on this one theme alone and hope to retain its readership……”
You are probably wrong General. That is likely the theme that the Intercept (under the direction of Greenwald and Poitras) plans to perpetuate – and their audience will remain small, but faithful. They will fill a niche. What you see is what you get (IMO).
Thanks.
It’s an interesting subject Craig. Sometimes I wish there was a “news” section here, so it could be more like one-stop shopping, and I wouldn’t have to skip around so much to CNN, the WSJ etc.
You probably are unfamiliar with it, being from Idaho and all, but there used to be this wickedly funny, caustic little industry blog run by a woman named Nikki Finke, called Deadline Hollywood. Finke stepped into a vacuum in that world and became wildly successful by putting something out there no one else had before. Then she expanded, dramatically, and the effect of it all became a lot more watered-down, similar to that other trade publication industry behemoth, Variety. I think that was prior to her selling to Jay Penske, and all the ensuing brouhaha between them.
So I don’t know what the answer is. But I do wish this site would expand a bit.
Hi Dabney
“…..It’s an interesting subject Craig. Sometimes I wish there was a “news” section here, so it could be more like one-stop shopping, and I wouldn’t have to skip around so much to CNN, the WSJ etc…..”
One stop news shopping is becoming a thing of the past. News outlets seem to be happy advocating for certain political causes, like Fox News and MSNBC, for example. How many times have we heard Fox news mentioned in a derogatory manner? I still like to visit the New York Times for general news and headline stories because they do a reasonably good job of providing both sides of most issues. A person should visit multiple sites for a controversial story, however. The Intercept will never be a one stop news source unless you want to hear one side of an issue argued in article after article (Israel, for example). The goal of advocacy journalism is to “adopt a non-objective viewpoint” to advocate for a desired “social or political’ result (ideally based on facts). This is really obvious in the coverage by the Intercept (and many others) of the death of Michael Brown.
General Hercules fears that the Intercept will become one of the most boring and predictable websites. It’s already predictable (and it was even before they released their first story), but certainly not boring – yet.
The NYT may be balanced on some subjects but I’m sure you have noticed their pronounced partisan (pro) Israel stance. I like to balance the Times out with Mondoweiss – have you looked at that site yet? I think it would be good for you. It is indispensable for Israel coverage, especially because of all the glaring omissions that the NYT makes. In fact, I like to look at Mondoweiss first, and then look at the Times to see everything they missed or distorted. And then of curse Barbara Erickson’s Timeswarp.org. You really will never get the whole story on any Israel-related topic at the Times, though lately there have been small encouraging signs of change.
I disagree with your comment about one-stop shopping becoming a thing of the past however. I know many people (my g’parents included) who use Fox News for all their news needs. They feel no need to go elsewhere. My father would not watch CNN if you put a gun to his head.
Dabney, on multiple occasions in reply to Craig I’ve quoted or linked to pieces at Mondoweiss. It would be fair to say Craig disdains that site.
Craig is an authoritarian and Zionist, so it makes total sense that Phil Weiss’s site would not be Craig’s cup of tea.
Like you, however, I routinely check Mondoweiss, as well as Electronic Intifada, when NYT or other establishment organs are reporting on Israel-Palestine. NYT has several out-and-out Zionists covering matters, so the bias can be thick. Balance does, indeed, entail going to a reliable alternative site.
“……I routinely check Mondoweiss, as well as Electronic Intifada…..Balance does, indeed, entail going to a reliable alternative site……”
Personally, I like to visit the Intercept where I can expect pictures at the top of articles which show dead Palestinian children and Jewish infants side by side to show the effects of the war on Palestinians and Israelis. Yep – nothing like the Intercept to fill in both sides of the story.
I was in FULL robotic take over with box. It’s not even fair to say that counted as sex. It was brain matter and skin with highlights of sensation. And it was saving the country the country. Look at the destruction on the streets you think those people would freak if they knew doctors didn’t give a shot about them? You think the doctors will even come I to work for that shit? They fucking work 24 hourbshifts and worked thier asses off to be doctors. You think they give a shit for people who walk out on work to protest? I don’t. I know them they are work horses they would tell them to fuck off. You can take your trauma care and shove it fuckers. That’s what they would say to all this epeople. It’s very close to beig a third world country some days it’s fuckig India.
They said you are in way over your head and I think calling planes out in the Air Force is pretty bad stuff. I would never do that to my country my country.
There is an immediant rush to sex that cures a feeling of absolute fear and sheer terror. Then it gradually becomes a tool used to seek revenge and use as a weapon. But none the less its detrimental to the psyche at all points of intrusion. It wears in the mind in a sordid slow painful blow to the brain. The CIA says that you know far more than you should and that I should hate and loath you. And so I believe them cause they have been telling the truth lately. Get your Beast on Billy cause this shit will blow hard if it goes down.
what
She is trying to distract readers from certain information below.
I think that Glenn and James get lost when they start questioning why Obama has continued to perpetuate the war on terror. The answer seems pretty clear if you consider that throughout history, centers of power consistently use pretexts to expand their power and repress attempts to challenge it. American power has clearly followed this pattern ever since 9/11 became a potent pretext.
Moreover, even if Obama is liberal, the state isn’t, so I don’t think anyone should expect an individual to be able to actualize their political ideals when they are in the heart of American power.
It seems to me that the only real way to end the socio-economic system of fear mongering and war profiteering that American power has built upon the pretext of waging a war on terror is to mobilize a popular counter-force. Unfortunately, the democratic organs that could organize people and influence our political institutions, such as workers unions or organized left wing parties, have been smashed into pieces by corporate power and the state.
So we ought to be on the ground picking up the pieces and organizing popular forces to end the war on terror, dismantle the system that has been built from it and replace it with a system focused on dealing with the real issues we face, such as inequality, climate change and the threat of nuclear conflict.
“If” Obama is liberal? Never has been.
Glen Ford on Obama:
“It should come as no surprise that President Obama has secretly extended the U.S. combat mission in Afghanistan. Empires do not retreat unless they are defeated. This is especially true of U.S. imperialism, which, like no other empire in history, seeks to bring the entire planet under its control. That’s why the United States maintains 900 military bases in 130 countries. It’s why Washington is methodically subverting international law, which it views as an impediment to its goal of global domination. And, that’s why President Obama never had any intention of withdrawing from Afghanistan, the longest war in American history.
Barack Obama is no different than any other U.S. imperial leader – except that he is a more accomplished liar than most…”
http://www.blackagendareport.com/node/14536
Workers’ union have not been ‘smashed into pieces’ but rather co-opted by the corporate “public-private partnerships” that have lead them to donate hundreds of thousands to candidates in exchange for city work. They are part of the problem. Everyone has sold out to the highest dollar.
COIN Is a Proven Failure
America risks shoveling more troops into Iraq to replicate a strategy that never worked in the first place.
By Daniel L. Davis
Excerpt:
http://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/coin-is-a-proven-failure/
Thank you for sharing that powerful commentary Pedinska.
“Despite the many shortcomings, some experts say that security improvements in some parts of the country – especially in and around the capital Kabul – combined with financial and development aid have led to considerable progress in the living conditions of millions of Afghans. This has enabled a surge in school enrolment from 1 million to 7.8 million children. Moreover, progress has been made regarding the situation of women, with the number of girls getting an education surpassing 2.8 million and a quarter of all seats in the country’s parliament being reserved for female politicians.
Although Afghanistan remains one of the poorest countries in the world, its economy has experienced a rapid expansion – admittedly from a very low starting point – with real gross domestic product averaging 9.2 percent between 2003 and 2012, according to the World Bank.
There have also been a number of improvements in terms of communication, transport infrastructure and health services, most of which have been achieved with the support of NATO contributing nations such as Germany which invests up to 430 million euros (around USD 580 million) a year in civilian reconstruction activities,” said Rolf Tophoven, director of the German-based Institute for Terrorism Research & Security Policy (IFTUS).”
I wonder what would it take for some people to admit that progress has been made in Afghanistan. Does the crime rate in Afghanistan need to be similar to that of Switzerland? Does the corruption index need to be similar to that of Finland? Does the education system need to be as effective as that of Finland? Do NATO troops need to be as effective as the Avengers, wiping out the whole Taliban movement? What metrics should be used to define improvements in Afghanistan? I have never met any economists, security experts, military experts and even politicians who claim NATO will change Afghanistan into Swiss resort. Was Afghanistan worth the sacrifices of so many NATO soldiers? I guess you will have to ask that question to 2.8 million girls going to school thanks to those troops.
Steb, so you approve of spending $2 trillion in direct outlays, 6,842 U.S. troops killed and 52,281 wounded in action? How often should we do this? Based on what considerations?
Steb, you are good. No, really. Hats off. Respect.
“American leaders should first consider this: despite what is often claimed by a host of advocates, the COIN theories upon which these recommendations are based were in fact demonstrable failures in both Afghanistan and Iraq.”
They weren’t failures, it’s exactly what they wanted.
Do we know the specifics of the exact ethnic groups that perished as a result? They do.
Life on Earth was never meant to be like what we are experiencing today.
Until you recognise the SEAT OF TOTALITARIANISM DOMINATION that hides in plain sight, you cannot remove these parasites from controlling our lives and our beautiful but damaged Mother Earth .
These PSYCHOPATHS need YOU to survive: but YOU DO NOT NEED THEM !
YOU DO NOT NEED THEM !
Although much is being done to try to prevent the OUR COLLECTIVE FREEDOM, IT CANNOT BE STOPPED.
Those who oppose OUR FREEDOM, may delay it a little, but they can never stop it. IT CANNOT BE STOPPED!
Who is who and what is what in the terror scam and the corporate sewer of a media?
One real big hint.
“…only Canada, the United States and the Ukraine voted against a Russian sponsored UN resolution condemning “glorification of Nazism and other practices that contribute to fuelling contemporary forms of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance.”
http://rt.com/news/207899-un-anti-nazism-resolution/
Can you even imagine that the good old USA would make a concerted effort on the world stage and in the UN to support nazism?
What is going on here?
Has Operation Paperclip Nazis take-over of the US government happened?
Has Operation Paperclip Nazis succeeded in infiltrating top spots in American society from top to bottom?
“That the having mode (vs the being mode of existence) and the resulting greed necessarily lead to interpersonal antagonism and strife holds true for nations as it does for individuals. For as long as nations are composed of people whose main motivation is having and greed, they cannot help waging war. They necessarily covet what another nation has, and attempt to get what they want by war, economic pressure, or threats.They will use these procedures against weaker nations, first of all, and form alliances that are stronger than the nation that is to be attacked. Even if it has only a reasonable chance to win, a nation will wage war, not because it suffers economically, but because the desire to have more and to conquer is deeply ingrained in the social character”
“While the nineteenth and twentieth centuries had periods of truce, they are characterized by a state of chronic war among the main actors on the historical stage. Peace as a state of lasting harmonious relations between nations is only possible when the HAVING structure is replaced by the BEING structure. The idea that one can build peace while encouraging the striving for possession and profit is an illusion, and a dangerous one, because it deprives people of recognizing that they are
confronted with a clear alternative: either a radical change of their character or the perpetuity of war. This is indeed an old alternative; the leaders have chosen war and the people followed them. Today and tomorrow, with the incredible increase in the destructiveness of the new weapons, the alternative is no longer war—but mutual suicide. What holds true of international wars is equally true for class war. The war between classes, essentially the exploiting and the exploited, has always existed in societies that were based on the principle of greed. There was no class war where there was neither a need for or a possibility of exploitation nor a greedy social character. But there are bound to be classes in any society, even the richest, in which the having mode is dominant. As already noted, given unlimited desires, even the greatest production cannot keep pace with everybody’s fantasy of having more than their neighbors. Necessarily, those who are stronger, more clever, or more
favored by other circumstances will try to establish a favored position for themselves and try to take advantage of those who are less powerful, either by force and violence or by suggestion. Oppressed classes will overthrow their rulers, and so on; the class struggle might perhaps become less violent, but it cannot disappear as long as greed dominates the human heart. The idea of a classless society in a so-called socialist world filled with the spirit of greed is as illusory—and dangerous—as the idea of permanent peace among greedy nations”
Erich Fromm from his book, “To have or to be”? A must read for anyone who cares about the future of humanity
I’m glad you didn’t go to jail today I was wondering with all the things the CIA said to you. Good luck!
James Risen C-Span interviewPay Any Price: Greed, Power and Endless War
Glenn has won the top German book prize. Bravo!
http://www.dw.de/glenn-greenwald-receives-top-german-book-prize/a-18103530
Mach weiter so, Number One!
I’m going to repeat this because the reality of the corruption going on now has been overshadowed by the debate about Zionists. In the meantime, in Chicago, this goes on:
AmericanGestapo, the corruption is deep and includes water and sewer departments, utilities, police, FBI, DHS, no doubt the fusion centers, NSA and CIA. In my case, the reason is political vendetta but they took years to lay the tracks. A woman who clearly is some sort of intelligence agent with corporate cover from Thompson Reuters is involved, along with her electrical engineer husband with Northrop Grumman. But there are also agents from a company called Pathstone as well as Huron. And yes it has been amazing to witness how easily it’s been for them to buy neighbors to become complicit. I had no idea that people could so easily be bought for new windows or a kitchen. Many of the people involved are young, and you must admit the best career opportunities during last decade have been within the police state. But it’s crazy when you see someone raising their child with lies. By the way, my initiation into this harassment began with being targeted with a weapon that created the microwave auditory effect. Several months before, the city’s sewer and water had worked for months directly in front of my home. And when they started project, they pulled directly in front if my condo. The lawn was brown all summer. I immediately realized that something was afoot, and at the same time noticed a very deep hole on the lawn exactly in line with where I sleep in bed. Despite months of street work, there was a break in the curb that also aligned with the hole and where I sleep. I began to run the hose down the hole for hours at a time. Eventually, the auditory effect stopped, and shortly later in the middle of the night I was awakened by two muffled booms which shook the ground. Interestingly, the auditory effect seemed to happen on a Sun-Thurs schedule, almost like someone took the weekend off between harassment.
AG, I have taken to wearing a heavy leather hat with window mesh lining the interior so I don’t wake up dizzy and with poor balance. It seems to help.
Myron May was a victim and I feel so bad for him. When you tell people what’s happening they immediately think you have lost your mind.?They try to destroy your family, your finances, your health with the goal of making you commit suicide. This is known about by many — even a cop I approached to ask about DEWs finished my sentence for me when I said ‘they’ had stopped using them but were now using — his word utttered in sync with mine — ‘satelllite.’
I pray and ask all of you here who also might pray for this diabolical evil to be revealed soon. If anyone had questions, I’d be hapoy to answer them. And yes I too have seen mental health and internists and have not been diagnosed as delusional or schizophrenic. But these assaults only happen when I’m alone, confirming 24/7 surveillance. And I have identified 11 coax cables running from the ‘foreclosed unit’ next door being rented to a very short contractor. The unit was sold just this past Monday to FannieMae who began the foreclosure procedure but then placed a ‘hold’ on it until I manage to post online information about unit this past summer.
I have posted previously the link that details how intelligence agencies are allowed to perform experiments. If anyone needs that again, please let me know and I will post again. But all here should know that Congress is complicit and needs to be challenged enmasse for this evil.
Ya, THINK? Geesh! Mona and her adversarial debate club are so fucking boring on this subject, but SOMEONE seems to encourage it.
Milgram, what the fuck is wrong with you? Are you hell bent to let these icehole cool the joint like William H, Macy? It is a CONSTANT barrage of this shite from same sources, so haven’t they had their say, or is this a fucking 1st Amendment issue with YOU? Killing the Intercept…drag it away, Bill!
Have you considered rearranging your sleeping habits or quarters? Those lazy fucks expect us to stick to boring patterns. Try sleeping in the tub on that Thurs -Sun cycle. and maybe go with subtle stripes.
Hay, I might have a role to play in this farce after all! I don’t doubt you are depressed and need analysis, as do your surroundings, but you might just be shiting on a sink hole. I’m serious.
Oh boy, Bezos is willing to give away the Post to tie us to his own mobile ad tanker. Filler up? Fuck you Bezos, go siphon your competitor’s hoses,
http://www.theguardian.com/media/2014/nov/30/plebgate-police-war-on-journalists
The Guardian is doing half GCHQ’s work burying their own fucking media section with that shitty palm layout…Grrrr.
Murdoch had several sacks of shite in different lockers. The cops kept the sacks of hacking shite silent for him, while his silks kept the sacks of shite he had on the paid off cops. So, he pretty much had them all in his own stink sack. Several high ranks were made to look into these sacks and assured us nothing was wrong inside the system over several years. Some said the shite still didn’t stink, but then one of these rank gentleman, old MacDonald, refused to continue this farce and told the police there was plenty of police crime inside the silk’s sack. Now the good cops and bad cops hate paper people.
WHAT I’M more curious about is WTF happened when Murdoch stupidly assumed allowing News International’s deleted emails to be retrieved bought him immunity for the executive suite from bribery charges. That is a cascade of events that those of us who know FCPA have prayed might slay the beast, even if it has spun away the FOX from NewsCorp’s self-destruction.
Who so badly mistook that deal? Did Murdoch KNOW he was permitting the law to penetrate his reporters’ sanctity millions of e-times from the now defunct News of the World to the Times of London?
The police still have all that shite, folks!! The silks will say it’s off limits, but WE KNOW how the UK and we abuse those digital lines. This was Will Lewis, now DOW’s CEO, and some two faced silks’ protection pIan as Murdoch prefers we view it. He expects us to believe he had no clue that to sell his peoples’ journalistic privileges away to save his stupid arse he’d be considered the man who betrayed journalism, wouldn’t his father be so proud? But no, no story about this mystery series. What gives, dismissives?
Say it LOUD! FCPA could take down NewsCorp, but no one wants to publicize that Murdoch ‘s crew weren’t just dirty, their dirty boss also outted them and the dirty coppers to keep his filthy firm from failing. We’re talking bankruptcy, folks. Come on, FCPA! Kill another bad corp for US!
Who might buy the bankrupted NewsCorp? Wanna run a paper, Glenn? I didn’t think so.
After they proved we fucked the French out of billions on their Mirages, Congress enacted the FCPA. And folks think the French hate us because we’re rude. That, too. Sacre Blue!
Appreciation for Risen’s work and sacrifices, assuming his motives are genuine. Risen theorizes primarily money and status as the driving forces behind this corruption. From experience there’s a particular step inherent to the situation that takes precedence, which precludes the corruption essentially resulting in it. Intel guides into or prevents specific individuals from the positions pertaining to the said money and status to begin with, in essence intentionally orchestrating the end result. I view the current situation only as a long continuation of ill-motivated genocide and theft. I think Risen is looking at an arm of the entity rather than it’s body.
“the War on Terror and Press Freedoms” – What is it all about?
More and more people around the world really think this so-called war on terror was created by those global elites who use war, chaos, hate, crime, deception and government & media control to try to rule the planet.
People are getting wise to their disgusting power scam on humanity.
The world press is owned by these global elites and the lies and deceptions keep pouring out like sewage.
More people are standing up and saying NO MORE.
They have their hands around our collective neck and we need to defend ourselves with all we collectively have so this little group of psychopaths don’t kill and enslave the greater part of humanity.
Eh…GG, would you pls make an exception with the comment section of this interview with Risen, and not close it as soon as you have done before with other articles? It seems to be generating quite a healthy, informative and spirited discourse that quite frankly, is almost intellectually nourishing.
Thanks in advance…
The level of ignorance among certain Greenwald’s supporters is just baffling. One suggests Mr Greenwald could walk in Gaza without fear. Yes, he could. However, he would have to hide his sexual orientation, he would have to avoid any words of support to the Palestnian gay community, and he would probably have to apologize for stating that Palestinians have done terrorist acts.
Aside from the fact that he’s totally out and well-known as gay, he’d never take one step to hide it. As a totally out gay Jew, he recently spent a week in Qatar, where he was unmolested.
The real barrier to Glenn’s going to Gaza, is that Israel would probably not let him leave Ben Gurion airport. As they do with many “wrong” Jews like Chomsky, they’d declare Glenn a “security risk” and disallow him entry.
People in traditional cultures are oddly willing to reconsider their illiberal views of you if you stand in solidarity with them against oppression and land theft.
1) The fact that you mentioned Glenn’s safe visit to Qatar shows how ignorant you are about Middle Eastern politics. You have consistently bash the US for even calling regimes in Qatar, Kuwait, UAE moderate. This is one of the clear reasons why these regimes are called moderate. Although their laws make homosexuality illegal, their leaders have rarely enforced them in order to remove the perception that there are closed societies. This is not the case in Hamas controlled Gaza.
2) if you were pro Palestinians, you would be outraged by any human right violations against the Palestinians not only when the Israeli violate their rights.
3) Again, you will not find any statements from me supporting Israeli occupation of Palestinian Territories. I think Israel should leave all the occupied territories tomorrow morning, remove all settlements tomorrow morning, and Jerusalem should be under international control as both sides cannot agree on its status.
4) One innocent civilian who dies in a conflict is a shame for humanity regardless he/she is American, Pakistani, Israeli, Palestinian, Iraqi, Syrian…that why decent human beings have passed international laws and conventions to protect innocent civilians. For you to suggest that specifically targeting and killing civilians is justified in 2014 makes me believe that I was doing you a favor by calling you an ignorant and Mr Greenwald’s lapdog. You are actually the worst scum of the earth to justify individuals who go to Egypt to kill tourists, go to Argentina to kill peaceful citizens or just kill peaceful citizens on the streets of Jerusalem because those individuals believe those tourists, those citizens are Jews or they just assume whoever walks on Jerusalem must be Jew while in fact many they specifically targeted and killed were just visitors curious about the Holy Land.
5) That was my explanation with regards to my belief that your comments are irrelevant and worthless. It is your choice if you do not ignore my comments or questions, (I frankly think you should) but I do not attach any value to yours.
Qatar, you stupid freak, is well known as a Hamas supporter, standing in particular opposition to Israel-friendly Egypt. But in any event, I’ve never discussed the issue of whether or not any of these regimes are “moderates,” much less bashed the U.S. for saying they are. A gay man could be expected to fare in Gaza about the same as he could in Hamas-aligned Qatar.
You are simply making shit up.
As for the rest of your twaddle, about me it is as accurate as your thinking that Qatar is somehow ideologically distinct from Hamas-led Gaza or that I bash the U.S. for claiming this or that Muslim nation is moderate (tho it’s possible I’ve dissed our solicitousness of the authoritarian Saudis). You are an idjit.
Poor impulse control.
Based on your psychological studies?
No, dipshit. Based on your 5-point refute after proclaiming that `mona’s comments were “irrelevant”. Seriously, you’re about as spent as they come (ht-‘zed’)..
Good Day
(…looking for ice to give to Stab to cool down his “hot seat “…)
“…..(…looking for ice to give to Stab to cool down his “hot seat “…)…..”
It’s clearly Mona that is the one that needs to cool down. She is totally obsessed with the IP conflict, Zionism and justifying the murder of all Jews including infants that reside in Israel. Mona supports the Hamas covenant which calls for the murder of Jews residing on Islamic Holy Land (Jews in Israel)). Mona believes that all Zionists (Jews) are racist. Mona believes that AIPAC (Jews) controls the Republican Party and Congress – and US foreign policy (even Chomsky rejects that bit of historical bigotry). In fact, Pat. I feel dirty just discussing the issues with her.
Thanks. (you gotta love politics)
Craig Summers, I believe that you meant well by informing me of what Mona believes in, re: the PI conflict. But it looks like she knows how to type and express her opinions and beliefs articulately enough, and thus appears capable of telling me herself if I were even to ask. I am sure that you will agree that firsthand narrations are always preferable to relays. But thank you anyway…
I’ve been known to summarize my sense of what I believe another thinks based on their public statements. But for Craig to do that vis-a-vis me would be like Joe McCarthy describing the beliefs and work of the Hollywood 10: one could expect a lot of feverish nonsense and outright falsehood. Certainly that’s what Craig delivered.
Actually, Mona understands the same thing that Moshe Dayan did, to wit: Palestinians want to kill the people who stole their land, and who continue stealing it, and who oppress them, keeping them penned up in refugee camps.
“…..Palestinians want to kill the people who stole their land, and who continue stealing it, and who oppress them, keeping them penned up in refugee camps……”
Again simple as can be – justification for the murder of civilians – including infants – which Palestinians have a long and sordid history of trying and accomplishing. Your statements also continue to indict yourself for the justification in the murder of civilians (like infants)
“…..The Itamar attack,[2] also called the Itamar massacre,[3] was an attack on a Jewish family in the Israeli settlement of Itamar in the West Bank that took place on 11 March 2011, in which five members of the same family were murdered in their beds. The victims were the father Ehud (Udi) Fogel, the mother Ruth Fogel, and three of their six children—Yoav, 11, Elad, 4, and Hadas, the youngest, a three-month-old infant. According to David Ha’ivri,[4] and as reported by multiple sources[5] the infant was decapitated.[6] The settlement of Itamar had been the target of several murderous attacks before these killings.[7]…..”
Again, all Israeli Jews are fair game including infants and babies. Targeting civilians has been a policy of the Palestinians at least since Yassir Arafat began his long road of terrorist acts. Your absolute refusal to condemn the murder of civilians (including infants) also serves to reinforce what I said to Pat B above which is that you (among the other things listed) justify the murder of infants (as long as they are Joos living in Israel). The Zionist Jews who reside outside of Israel are just simply racist i.e., anti black.
You are pathetic and fairly easy to dismantle because your hatred runs much deeper than your ability to debate. Much deeper.
As a child I was, of course, taught all the standard tales of Indian atrocities; how this or that tribe massacred men…and women and children. As I was supposed to, I absorbed that these Indians had been some sort of demonic savages — even slaying infants!– as they did.
Then I grew up and learned that white people, my tribe, can do heinous things. Like stealing land and oppressing the former owners. Doing what the Zionist have been doing, and still are doing, to Palestinians now.
If asked, I’d have told an Indian in 1750 not to slaughter the wee white baby in its cradle. But I also would have tried to prevent an inequitable division of land rights. And I would focused on my side’s sins, rather than on the murderous reaction of some of my victims.
So, so much easier — nay, pleasurable! — to focus on the rage-fueled reactions of one’s victims, eh Craig?
Well Steb, speaking of ignorance… YOUR IGNORANCE… Just remember that SECRET POLICE WITH SECRET LAWS will breed SECRET PUNISHMENTS! This article says that. How is it that you missed the obvious?
In the words of a former Stazi head: “we in the East German secret police could have only fantasized about having such serveilance abilities (during the cold war) that the NSA now has”.
“The free world” is now worse than the feared KGB & Stazi world, because of ignorant people like you. I’ll bet your NSA handlers are real proud of you and your loyalty of betraying “the free world”.
Did you address me because it makes you feel good?
Interesting interview, and I always like to hear Glenn talk. On Risen – I don’t know what to make of him. I am feeling skeptical of media narratives lately. Maybe all Official Narratives. Perhaps I will live in a Alice in Wonderland-esque world where narratives in general are banned, I don’t know. I am sorry for any distress he might be experiencing as a result of his work, but then, it seems he’s unlikely to go to prison and also got himself a nice book deal and public name for himself out of the situation. GG worried me because he seemed like a plucky blogger all by his lonesome in Brazil. Risen strikes me as being ‘in’ with the media, and with that – I mean, they are literally the group that puts narratives ‘out there’ in the first place. It’s like the town crier reporting on the town crier, what are the odds they’ll get a sympathetic framing? The APA doesn’t seem to like him a whole lot, and to my mind they have a pretty good reputation – then again, no one likes to be criticized. Who knows? Perhaps I am overly skeptical at this point, but without knowing more about him I’ll just say interesting interview.
I thought it was interesting that Greenwald does, in the above interview, seem to take it as absolutely axiomatic that national security threats, as generally presented at least, are a bunch of hooey. I don’t agree with him on that point but I found it interesting that his conviction there seems quite genuine (I like genuineness, as a rule, so was glad to see that). He seemed sincerely confused, for example, about Obama’s actions, when most of the “But why the heck would he….?!” questions he asked could have been logically answered with a “Because there is a real, actual threat, and action for security is actually justified in the face of it.” Again, he seems to take it as a given that this just isn’t the case, and while I disagree (But also consider it one of those “How could you ever know for sure?” questions – i.e., how can you know whether or not you need a home security system until you take your chances by removing it? It’s a prediction that is largely intuition based.) I like the fact that his stances come from sincere beliefs and not posturing.
You are absolutely right, there are legitimate security threats. I don’t believe Greenwald or Risen have ever denied that legitimate threats exists. I think they are simply stating that we are being fed a steady diet of fear in the media, that is overblown. I don’t watch television anymore for this reason, despite having a background in the media, but I read U.S. and international newspapers each day. Every time I meet a friend for lunch or dinner, they recite the threat “du jour” ISIS, Ebola etc…I’m always a bit taken aback by their hysteria, since most of them aren’t very political, but then I remember the power of propaganda.
The fear is then used to justify all sorts of bizarre activity like spying on “Angry Birds” aka children, spying on entire countries like the Bahamas as a test case, tapping Angela Merkel’s cell phone for 11-12 years. Yes, back when the NSA was hiring like crazy all of the young brilliant physicists and mathematicians who went to work them them, they took the job partially because they thought they were serving their country and fighting the bad guys…in other countries. I’m 100% sure they did do some good work and there are very legitimate targets and operations. The entire world, however, is not a legitimate target and operation…I think that’s the point. You know a few nuts, with secrecy, a lot of power and unlimited funds…like Gottlieb in the CIA, back in the day can do tremendous damage.
Now on to Risen. I spent some time around NYT reporters mostly during the Bush years. The New York Times is an institution. The people who work there are very proud of their affiliation and it is almost their identity. Risen is not a young guy. He would have made his career when the Times was a bit more open to real talent. When Risen talks about taking the risk of being fired by the NYT and going to jail for taking a stand…he said he didn’t sleep for six months. He has a wife and a family to support, when good paying jobs in journalism with benefits are hard to find. Even if he is bit old school and hasn’t fully grasped the new dynamics at play, he still took a very honorable position. FYI, so you know. The story circulating at the time was that they had a lock on Bin Laden’s cell phone and he only got away because of the New York Times story. Was it disinfo bullshit, I don’t know?
I only check the front page of the New York Times now to see if there is any real news, if it’s fluff, I move on to other sources.
“……I only check the front page of the New York Times now to see if there is any real news, if it’s fluff, I move on to other sources……”
You means the ones that convict a person of murder without a fair hearing – like the Intercept. You mean the ones that promote fabricated narratives in the name of justice. Yea, I see what you mean. The New York Times is just so over the top – hardly worth the read.
Craig, you hairless dingo, you’re here more than Glenn Greenwald and Mona put together.
As for the NYT (i.e. the Rag.), they muddy the waters more than you do. It’s like trying to read old man river … ‘he must know something, but he don’t say nothing, he just keeps rolling along…’
Craig, I think the salient point in my comment above is that they claimed to have a lock on Bin Laden’s phone. I’m not even sure that’s public knowledge Craig. If it is now, it certainly wasn’t at the time. In that case, I would see why the government might be upset with Risen. BUT the New York Times sat on the story for over a year, which would have given USG plenty of time to send in a team to kill or capture him. Why wasn’t this done? It’s not like Bush and Cheney were gun shy.
Thanks for your reply
Who had a lock on Bin Laden’s phone number – and in what year?
Guess…but it probably would have been described to the NYT as a high value target and I assume that’s one of the reasons they held the story. There is a legitimate reason for newspapers to withhold stories when it will damage national security. The problem is that the the editors and reporters don’t know whether the government is telling the truth or lying to cover up an illegal program.
Fair enough. I can see no reason why Bush and Cheney would not have tried to kill Bin Laden if they had a lock on the cell phone of Bin Laden. On the other hand, It seems inconceivable that Bin Laden would use a cell phone, but who knows?
Thanks
GG’s storyline was a bit more delineated for me in that the mainstream press, in addition to the government, also seemed to be quite adversarial to him. Unlikely that David Gregory was unconsciously taking on Glenn’s narrative because gosh darn it, he just identifies with him so much. That’s not necessarily the case with Risen. After some minimal observation, I’ve come to think it’s sad but true that the press does, at times, simply make shit up. My point in saying that is not that I think Risen ‘made up’ his story, I’m saying the idea of home team bias and promoting particular narratives works both ways whenever you have groups in opposition. Either way, he seems like a nice guy and, again, at a human level, I’m sorry for any distress he’s gone through over this story.
@ Mona
Your comments are irrelevant to me. I do not waste time with those who sympathize with terrorists.
The terrorists are, of course, the state, and the lick-spittle pieces of filth such as you-self.
Impressive statement Mr. Jones.
Steb, you sympathize with terrorists by definition. You are a Zionist.
And Mona, you and these “adversaries” of yours are COOLERS! This place sucks when you get to blowing up Israel. Well done, GCHQ.
Seriously, anyone out there who doesn’t know a bunch of bickering on the issue of Israel sends many running through the streets looking for some cigarette smoke? Geesh, these fuckers tear gas every thread with this rhetoric and it fucking sucks, Glenn. Can’t you give them their own table? They are bumming everyone else out of the street. Or can’t you tell? Learn to fucking read, Glenn!
Seriously, I’m up for saying it’s time for this topic driven by these same psycho fucks be banned. Anything else they want to blow is Joe, but this shite has GOT TO GO!!
The Israeli/Palestinian saga is so sad. I have read Dershowitz and have read Finkelstein, and many others in between. Yet the same picture emerges always: the fear of peace is so much stronger than the desire to abandon the status quo in its favor.
It is perhaps because a people so long immersed in hostilities and violence since 1948, truly have no idea what it is like to live in peace. And have a collective and subconscious fear of it. I will never know for sure.
And so a web of false narratives is spun left, right and center; narratives that always seek to invariably support and perpetuate the tragedy. And actions on the ground are taken to physically reinforce those narratives. And if you are an observer, you weep not for Palestine or Israel. But for humanity itself…
From my perspective, there’s no political or military solution.
The real solution is spiritual and ethical. It’ll happen when those who are in power and control will collectively reflect the higher consciousness/self.
The most basic and universal attribute of the higher self is simple: Do not do to others what you don’t want done unto you.
The Palestinians need to appreciate what their Jewish cousins went through and understand their narrative, and the Israelis need to understand and appreciate what the Palestinians have been going through and understand their narrative.
“How would WE feel if we were in their situation?” is what the two sides need to reflect on.
Other attributes of the higher consciousness include forgiveness, humility, sharing, selflessness, generosity, love, peace, detachment from the transient (land, power, control, resources, etc.), not seeing any ‘other-ness’.
I do not believe that the earth must be populated by angels or the Prince of Peace needs to return for that to happen.
I am often dumbfounded when I hear a devout Christian say that Jesus would only return only when a certain piece of land is inhabited by a certain group of people, and then they go on to applaud what’s done to the Palestinians.
I’m equally appauld when I hear venomous rhetoric against our Jewish cousins in support of violence against them, especially against the non-combatants, and often with the justification that it’s all part of prophecies about the Last Day.
The higher self that you talk about is a noble place to dwell but it is unattainable for most humans, unfortunately…
Then there is no chance of peace, unless there’s a huge calamity that corrects the course for humanity.
People in power and control generally know what’s needed for peace, and they do show their higher selves in other situations. But when it comes to politics and international relations, they become selfish and power and control hungry.
Read what Rabbi Lerner has to say.
I don’t lack that much faith in humanity.
Humanity often rises in its levels of consciousness to help people when a natural calamity strikes them!
So, we all know the attributes of the higher self experientially.
Even the most evil people show love and affection to, say, their pets and their immediate family members.
If I’m not mistaken, Hitler did have a dog he loved, and was also loving towards his girlfriend, right?
We’ve also had people like Gandhi, MLK, Mother Theresa, Nelson Mandela and numerous others, who often reflected the higher consciousness.
“From my perspective, there’s no political or military solution.
The real solution is spiritual and ethical. It’ll happen when those who are in power and control will collectively reflect the higher consciousness/self.”
Once again, I agree with you and appreciate your focus on the bigger picture. Many brilliant minds concentrate on political and military solutions and yet I do feel that a critical mass is slowly building under the surface of people who recognize the need for an evolution in consciousness.
But will it take nothing short of exhaustion from war to finally bring this forth and see it reflected in those in power? Are they just mirrors of the people they rule? Are we really that warlike? Just duped? Was Gruber right about our intelligence? When there’s a will…
Mona
“…..It would be interesting to see that. I’d like to compare it with Yitzhak Shamir’s 1943 article advocating terrorism as proper for use by Jewish Zionists in Palestine. If, that is, such language from contemporary pro-Palestinian groups actually exists……”
The Hamas covenant calls for the killing of Jews quoting Muhammed from a Hadith (Part I, Article 7):
“……the Hamas has been looking forward to implement Allah’s promise whatever time it might take. The prophet, prayer and peace be upon him, said: The time will not come until Muslims will fight the Jews (and kill them); until the Jews hide behind rocks and trees, which will cry: O Muslim! there is a Jew hiding behind me, come on and kill him!…..”
You’ll notice that there is no distinction. All Jews are fair game. As an example, the recent attack of the Synagogue in which five Jews were murdered while worshiping was applauded by Hamas (adhering to their covenant). Hamas also applauded the murder of the Jewish infant using a vehicle. But you have also made plain your support or at least justification of those murders Mona.
Nice try, Craig. Let’s look at your quote from the Hamas Charter in context, my emphasis:
Hamas’s battle is against Zionists. That is, with the people who stole their land and holds them in subjection in refugee territories. (Moshe Dayan entirely understood why the Palestinians hated Zionists and sought their blood, and so should you.)
In any event, Steb keeps insisting that pro-Palestinian groups hold as formal policy the killing of civilians. I’ve not seen evidence of this.
Mona
What do you mean nice try? Hamas does not distinguish in their covenant between civilians and military. We already understand there is a Jewish state Mona. That has never been in dispute. A Jewish “invasion” is irrelevant to the question. The question is whether Hamas targets civilians as a matter of policy. Their covenant and past record proves this beyond any doubt.
Nice to see you avoided answering the questions at the end of the post. It would be nice if you were just playing games here, but it’s been clear for some time that you support the murder of civilian (Jews).
Thanks Mona.
Neither do they specifically call for calling civilians, as Steb claimed. Since civilians — settlers — steal their land, it would not be gratuitous civilian killing to do to these settlers what some Native Americans did to white European settlers here in the U.S. Certainly only the land thieves benefit from depicting this as as mindless savagery.
“……Neither do they specifically call for calling civilians, as Steb claimed. Since civilians — settlers — steal their land, it would not be gratuitous civilian killing to do to these settlers what some Native Americans did to white European settlers here in the U.S. Certainly only the land thieves benefit from depicting this as as mindless savagery……”
In the covenant which has never been renounced by Hamas, ALL of Israel is occupied, therefore there is no distinction between the occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem and the rest of Israel. All Zionist are settlers who occupy Islamic holy land. In addition, Palestinians voted in the Hamas government, therefore, Palestinians – fully understanding the Hamas covenant – are supportive of the goals in the covenant which is to kill the occupiers.
Thanks
Well if so, then Dayan was right:
Still, nothing in the Hamas Charter explicitly calls for killing civilians.
Mona
“…..Still, nothing in the Hamas Charter explicitly calls for killing civilians…..”
No, it explicitly calls for killing Jews. Do you want to explain the distinction?
Meaning Zionists, as it explicitly says; the invading army and its settlers. You know, the people who stole and still still steal Palestinian land. The Palestinians whom Dayan said understandably longed for the blood of their Zionist oppressors.
“…..Meaning Zionists, as it explicitly says; the invading army and its settlers. You know, the people who stole and still still steal Palestinian land…..”
Civilians then. All people (Jews) who “stole” their land. There is really not much more for you to argue on this point. The Palestinians have a long and documented record of targeting and murdering Israeli civilians as a matter of policy. The PLO and Hamas are both guilty – as is Islamic Jihad etc (and there are a few more) They have done this with the use of suicide bombers, armed insurgents, rockets and so on. There simply is nothing more to say on this particular subject. Lying won’t alter the truth.
Thanks.
Sure isn’t. Not as long as neither you nor Steb can show this purportedly explicit policy for killing civilians that distinguishes pro-Palestinians from the ANC. #stillwaiting
Hamas explicitly calls for the murder of Jews in writing, in their covenant. Unless you believe that Jews living in Israel cannot be civilians, then you have been proven wrong Mona beyond a shadow of a doubt. This is not first term law school or the high school debate Mona.
Zionists, Craig. Zionist on their land. Not Jews per se.
Max Blumenthal can walk in Gaza without fear. I’d bet Glenn could as well. While both men are Jews, they haven’t stolen an inch of Palestinian land. They are not building settlements on land that belongs to others. So, these guys are not people whom, as Dayan put it, Gazans look at and want to spill their blood.
Mona
“…..Zionists, Craig. Zionist on their land. Not Jews per se……”
Yes, Jews per say i.e., Jews residing on Islamic Holy Land i.e., Israel.
“…..Muslims will fight the Jews (and kill them); until the Jews hide behind rocks and trees, which will cry: O Muslim! there is a Jew hiding behind me, come on and kill him!…..”.
You have been proven wrong Mona.
Thanks.
Carig, you fuckwit, Jews residing in the State of israel are Zionist by definition. As already pointed out to you, Jews like Max Blumenthal or Glenn Greenwald are in no danger from angry Palestinians, because Max and Glenn have not stolen any Palestinian land. They in fact oppose that land theft.
The entire Hamas charter is drafted in response to the violence and inequities of ZIONISM. The religious passage you quote is explicitly invoked to oppose the predations of ZIONISM. But for ZIONISM, the Hamas charter would not exist.
Always avoiding the point which is that among the Zionist joos living in Israel, all are fair game including infants, pregnant women and so on. Hamas and the Palestinians TARGET CIVILIANS AS A MATTER OF POLICY. That the Palestinians have a case for resistance is another point entirely – and an entirely different debate. If I am a Palestinian, I am going to resist, but Hamas has generally damaged the cause of the Palestinians while getting a whole bunch (purposely) killed in the process.
Thanks.
No more so than did the ANC, whose cause was also just. You might say they target civilians often, but can’t cite any policy for it: Steb (and you) have both failed to distinguish Gazans from the ANC by showing evidence that the former has explicit, formal policies of targeting innocent civilians that the latter lacked.
@Mona
“Steb cannot locate any actual policy statements from pro-Palestinian groups endorsing killing civilians”-Mona
“Israeli civilians have only been hit in self-defense, and as a response to Israeli attacks against unarmed Palestinian civilians … We have already made many offers to reconsider our POLICY of targeting Israeli civilians inside Israel proper in exchange for Israel reversing its policy of killing Palestinian civilians.” Ramadan Abdullah Shallah, May 2002, Secretary-general of Islamic Jihad Movement of Palestine.
” . . . Islam gives me the right to behave with my enemy as my enemy behaves to me,”. “If he kills civilians, it is our right to kill their civilians.” Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, 1997, Founder of Hamas
I was about to present more quotes from other groups, then I remember I was debating with Mona, an ignorant lapdog who suffers Zionist Tourette. My question was simple: Is specifically targeting and killing civilians as Palestinian Terrorists do according to their official policy justified?
I did not ask anything about Irish, Nigerian, Israeli, American….Syrian terrorists. I asked you a simple question based on your comparison of the killings of innocent civilians in Israel and the killing of civilians in South Africa. However, I say it again Mona: YOU MAY IGNORE MY QUESTION because I already know your typical ignorant answer: “Steb is a Zionist. Israel…Jews…Zionists are terrorists”.
I have no clue if this quote is authentic and presented here with proper context. So I am going to comment on it at its face value:
========
I do not know what this Sheikh was drinking or smoking.
It’s total non-sense, as far as Traditional Islam is concerned!
I do not know the width and the depth of his knowledge of the Shari’ah in all its diverse manifestations and interpretations, but this type of venom usually comes from “Puritanical Salafism”, where this terms is used to refer to the entity that emerged as a result of the marriage that took place between the Wahhabi movement and the little older Salafism movement in the middle of the last century.
The term, “Puritanical Salafism”, has been coined by Dr. Khaled Abou El Fadl in his recent book on Shari’ah: Reasoning with God: Reclaiming Shari’ah in the Modern Age. See this link on Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/Reasoning-God-Reclaiming-Shariah-Modern/dp/0742552322/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1417369149&sr=8-1&keywords=reasoning+with+god
Puritanical Salafism has influenced movements, such as al-Queda, Taliban, ISIL, and, perhaps, Boko Haram as well. I haven’t done any research on Boko Haram, but their actions are clearly way off when compared with Traditional Islam.
The book I’ve mentioned above is a bit lengthy and complex, but the author has provided many distinguishing characteristics of Wahhabism and Salafism that ordinary Muslims don’t even realize as these two ideologies have infected Islam to such a great extent where it’s become difficult for them to distinguish between Traditional Islam and the Wahhabi/Salafi Islam.
The creation of the modern state of Saudi Arabia to counter the Ottoman Empire was a pivotal moment in the history of Wahhabism and Salafism. Saudi petro dollars and its “occupation” of the Hijaz (the area in Saudi Arabia that covers Makkah and Madinah — the two most sacred places for the Muslims) and a few other factors, such as financing mosques and religious schools, and distributing literature, audios and videos, religious TV channels accessible around the world, and training Imams and other religious leaders, have allowed this cancer within Islam to spread widely and deeply.
The evil acts of 911 opened many eyes to this Saudi Islam, and it did experience a set back. However, a few years after 911, it became clear that this Puritanical Salafism wouldn’t go down so easily. It has been making a come-back now.
The most interesting thing is that the House of Saud will fall like a House of Cards if certain powers stop supporting and sustaining it.
The quote is from an interview with the Washington Post. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A99148-1997Oct26_2.html
No you weren’t; and you still haven’t presented any quotes showing that pro-Palestinian groups have formally adopted unique policies of killing civilians any more so than have the Israelis. (Your quotes are about tit for tat.)
You fuckwitted gasbag, I never made any such comparison. YOU are the one who introduced an irrelevant claim about the ANC v. pro-Palestinian groups and their respective policies regarding civilians. This is entirely YOUR hobby horse.
“The Jewish Zionists of Israel are an ongoing, vile oppressor. The ANC killed innocents, too. Sometimes horrifically.
The ANC’s cause was just, and so is that of the Palestinians.” Mona, 28 Nov 2014
Not sure why you reposted that Steb, but thank you. It’s entirely true. Innocents have been killed in many just causes, and that includes the Palestinian cause.
The vomiting of the State of Israel on the people of Palestine was the foulest human rights violation since WWII.
Mona
“……Yes, Mandela and the ANC saw up close and personal how racist Israel is when that state was in bed with apartheid South Africa. This allowed the ANC to early-on remove rose-colored glasses worn by so many of us Westerners, fed as we have been a long diet of Holocaust guilt and pro-Zionist propaganda in books and film……Israel is and always has been deeply racist, and Zionists still cling to anti-black themes.”
Of course, that applies to all Zionists (Jews). I’m not sure how you can say something so ignorant, Mona. I am just as certain that if I said all African Americans are lazy, you would be the first to rightfully condemn the comment as racist. But I doubt anyone is shocked (or cares) by what you say anymore, Mona.
However, let’s just say for the moment that the Seattle-based Zionist from the story you linked is a racist, does that justify the recent brutal murder of Jews peacefully praying in a Synagogue in Jerusalem – and does that apply to all Zionist Jews? We all understand (now) that horrific acts of violence – like necklacing – are justified to enact social change. Would you support necklacing of Zionist (Jews) to bring down the Jewish state?
No, it does not apply to all Jews. Jews who are not Zionists are much less likely to be racists than Jews who are. Political Zionism’s foundation is racist. Zionism is a relic of 19th century enthusiasms for supremacist ethnic nationalism, a movement that died in the 20th century except for Zionists.
“…..Zionism is a relic of 19th century enthusiasms for supremacist ethnic nationalism, a movement that died in the 20th century except for Zionists…..”
I love how you make this stuff up Mona. There was absolutely no antisemitism in the 19th and 20th centuries (or 0-18) – especially in eastern Europe which still harbors plenty of anti Jewish racists. That couldn’t have been one of the primary driving forces behind Jewish nationalism. And ethnic nationalism is still plenty alive today, Mona. Just look up in Wikipedia all of the ethnic nationalists around the world seeking autonomy. You just pick and choose what you want to believe about Zionism.
“…..No, it does not apply to all Jews. Jews who are not Zionists are much less likely to be racists than Jews who are……”
Oh, they will be thrilled to know that. Maybe you should stamp that with the “Third Reich” so it’s official. Would you just quit with this garbage?
I make up nothing Craig. Geez, I thought you were an educated man with a basic understanding of modern world history. Well, if you won’t accept my claim about a basic historical fact, I’ll quote from Tony Judt. Blood and soil nationalism became a thing in the 19th century West, and was implemented in the first part of the 20th. Most people are aware of this! Anyway, here’s Judt, emphasis his:
Judt, New York Review of Books.Hope that helps, Craig.
“…..Hope that helps, Craig…..”
Listen Mona. I have been listening to a bunch of intolerant left wing hacks for the past decade post the same bullshit about Israel. It’s still one of the primary reasons I post (especially at the Intercept). You are just one more in a long line. Tony Judt has his own view of history. According to Wikipedia:
“……A Marxist Zionist as a young man, Judt dropped his faith in Zionism after youthful experience in Israel in the 1960s and came to see a Jewish state as an anachronism; he moved away from Marxism in the 1970s and 1980s. In later life, he described himself as “a universalist social democrat”.[2] Judt’s works include the highly acclaimed Postwar, a history of Europe after the Second World War. He was also well known for his views on Israel, which generated significant debate after he advocated a one-state solution to the Israeli–Palestinian conflict……”
Your selective choices for viewpoints of Israel are really a joke Mona. I have never said that nationalism was not popular in the 19th century. It just that you choose to ignore the rest of history based on a selective quote from an author who is an anti Zionist. Antisemitism was a catalyst for Zionism and for the mobilization of Jews to Palestine (Wikipedia).
“…..In the 19th century, a current in Judaism supporting a return to Zion grew in popularity,[42] particularly in Europe, where antisemitism and hostility towards Jews were also growing……..In the following years, Jewish immigration to Palestine started in earnest. Most immigrants came from Russia, escaping the frequent pogroms and state-led persecution. They founded a number of agricultural settlements with financial support from Jewish philanthropists in Western Europe. Further Aliyahs followed the Russian Revolution and Nazi persecution…..”
Antisemitism underpinned Jewish nationalism and their return to Palestine. If people hate you because you are a Jew, that’s fairly good incentive to leave. Jews have been scapegoats in multiple societies especially in Europe. Although you detest the Holocaust (for all of the wrong reasons), it clearly proves exactly what I’m saying, Mona. The Holocaust was the culmination of centuries of hate. To deny that antisemitism is an important part of Jewish nationalism is absurd.
Thanks Mona.
That’s some really neato hand-waving Craig, and it’s clear you don’t like Tony Judt. Nevertheless, and sadly for you, his intellectual history is accurate.
Political Zionism is rooted in 19th century blood and soil ethnic nationalism, a politics that was rendered unrespectable in the 20th. Except for Israel. Which put blood and soil ethnic nationalism on steroids.
This anachronism is always racist, and always requires illiberal policies to enforce the demands of ethnic purity and supremacy. That is why we see rampant racism in Israel and a race to fascism.
Thanks to the Internet, and mainstream books such as John Judis’ “Genesis,” the racist and reactionary foundations of Israel are increasingly exposed.
Israel is more and more a pariah state. Blood and soil ethnic nationalism is rejected by the West, and exempting Israel from this is no longer sustainable.
As for this:
The Holocaust lacks the power to transform evil into something not evil for the descendants of its victims. As Mark Braverman asks liberal Zionists who are sad at the edging toward fascism in Israel:
To return to one of my favorite paraphrases of Max Blumenthal: Zionism has killed thousands of Palestinian bodies, and thousands more of Jewish souls.
Mona
“……Israel is more and more a pariah state. Blood and soil ethnic nationalism is rejected by the West, and exempting Israel from this is no longer sustainable…..”
You more than most people I have met are living this dream that the west is going to suddenly see the light – and support a boycott against Israel like South Africa and force a one state solution. This is simply fantasy on your part Mona. The west will never force a single state solution. A boycott might take effect to force or convince Israel to vacate the West Bank – nothing more. The west will NEVER bring down Israel – the only Jewish state in the world.
The single state solution must come from within Israel which is not very likely for the foreseeable future. Of course, the reason is simple that the west will reject your solution Mona. Israel is not Apartheid South Africa – and everyone knows that except extreme leftist like you, extreme right wingers like David Duke and right wing Muslim activists – many who are violent extremist. The lying left fabricated the Apartheid analogy for political reasons – and outside of the group mentioned above, people realize the resemblance between Israel and Apartheid South Africa is false. Thus, it is a pipe dream to believe that America or Europe will actively boycott the Jewish state.
Lo and behold, Mona, Israel is still the only democracy in the Middle East. The Middle East is currently a complete disaster; a place where tens of thousands of people seeking political rights have been murdered over the last several years. Israel is a beacon of freedom – especially compared to the dysfunctional Palestinian government which elected a terrorist organization to power. A single state solution would necessarily become a Palestinian Arab majority state which would only relegate Jews to a second class status – something they have spilled a large amount of blood to avoid – and will continue to avoid until far into the future.
Keep Dreaming Mona. Thanks as always
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
Craig, no country can survive as the pariah of the Western world. Won’t. Happen. It’s psychologically intolerable for the citizens of the country. It will implode, or reform, or both.
North Korea, the pariah of the west is surviving.
Steb, that’s a very good point. Israel is edging toward being as isolated as North Korea, except that NoKo doesn’t care about belonging to the West. Israel does; the West is ejecting israel.
Yes, Israel is becoming as respected as is North Korea. For a self-identified Western democracy, that’s quite a feat!
People may have been ‘grappling with’ this distinction, but apparently that doesn’t extend to a desire to investigate it.
So while the roles of the Saudi government and wealthy people in the Persian Gulf are undeniably different – the wealthy people fund the terrorists, while the government officially denies they are doing it – it’s clear they are both complicit. And of course, the US government, by its failure to investigate, is complicit as well.
Now continued instability in the Middle East probably suits the strategic interests of both the United States and Saudi Arabia. The US because it is operating a protection racket (shielding its client states from this instability) and Saudi Arabia because it remains stable by exporting its young radicals to these fields of conflict and gets to attack its Shi’a enemies. So I certainly would be the last person to criticize it in any way. But it bothers me when people refuse to acknowledge it, or use euphemisms which obscure the true state of affairs.
Sorry – after a rough night, I had trouble locating the ‘post comment’ button, and as I was testing various buttons, apparently hit it twice by mistake.
(burp.) Tell me about it … i had a rough wkend*.
>”Now continued instability in the Middle East probably suits the strategic interests of both the United States and Saudi Arabia.”
How now brown cow? The Leaders in every age, some from want of knowledge others from lust of power, have been the cause of deprivation of the peoples.
*i had this Asian flower on one side and a Mountain momma on the other and we tried to build a bridge of friendship across the middle east …
People may have been ‘grappling with’ this distinction, but apparently that doesn’t extend to a desire to investigate it.
So while the roles of the Saudi government and wealthy people in the Persian Gulf are undeniably different – the wealthy people fund the terrorists, while the government officially denies they are doing it – it’s clear they are both complicit. And of course, the US government, by its failure to investigate, is complicit as well.
Now continued instability in the Middle East probably suits the strategic interests of both the United States and Saudi Arabia. The US because it is operating a protection racket (shielding its client states from this instability) and Saudi Arabia because it remains stable by exporting its young radicals to these fields of conflict and gets to attack its Shi’a enemies. So I certainly would be the last person to criticize it in any way. But it bothers me when people refuse to acknowledge it, or use euphemisms which obscure the true state of affairs.
Benito, it was beneath the character you have constructed to have apologized for this duplicity. That is something you should have blamed on an opponent. Perhaps the Church, next time?
Mother
I feel the spirit of the season washing all over my African hinny ( actually not true). So Mona, Kitt, CraigSummers and Stab, please play nice with one another. At least until February!
Which part isn’t true, feeling the seasonal spirit around here or possessing an African mule…?
Sorry, Pat B., I couldn’t resist. Perhaps you meant “hiney?”
Meant “hiney”. Honey. Thanks. It’s what happens when the pond stubbornly stands between England and America. ‘Hiney’ soon becomes ‘hinny’. ‘Ass’, ‘arse’. You catch the drift…Happy Hannukah, Xmas. Am an agnostic so it all works out for me jess fine.
Talking of religion, the torturers initially tried to get me to accept Jesus; they were hoping for a behavioural change they could count as a score to validate their sick theories. Everywhere I went, men in expensive garb offered me the Awake magazine (Jehovah’s witness stuff). I’d gracefully take it and toss it in the garbage, sometimes while they watch. Read Will Filer, a former NSA contractor on the use of religion to control subjects.
Why, until “February?” What happens in February?
Ok, take a breath, TI’ers:
Thought you all might be interested to know (if anyone didn’t) – James Risen will be talking about this book TONIGHT on C-SPAN Q and A – 8 p.m. if I remember the derails correctly.
No, Craig, as usual, it is you who totally does not get the most fundamental point. I was actually a bit dubious about some of the framing of Ferguson events here at TI, as well as in other parts of the media. But that issue is not the core problem.
Because after release of the grand jury evidence, I am appalled. What Bob McCulloch ran was an evidence-avalanche (unusual) to put MICHAEL BROWN on trial. It was unfuckingbelieveable. Anything going on in the media parallel or after this travesty is beside the point.
Tho bearing no relationship at all to whether probable cause existed that Darren Wilson illegally killed Michael Brown, the grand jury was treated to scads of testimony depicting Michael Brown as a demon afflicted with reefer madness. This testimony was not cross-examined, and I inform you that it was sheerest bullshit. Michael Brown and weed were put on trial!
A circus like that does not go on, except when the “prosecutor” is actually acting as a defense attorney for the suspect. And that is what happened here.
All your hand-waving about leftists and the media does not change the fact that a procedural, gross miscarriage of justice took place.
“Mona did not point that out. What I said was persons acting in the name of a just cause have sometimes killed innocents, sometimes horrifically.”
That was not the ANC policy of targeting innocent civilians. That is the OFFICIAL policy of Palestinan terrorist groups of targeting and killing innocent civilians. What is “just” about searching for innocent civilians to kill them? What is ” just” about aiming at the destruction of another state?
A: If in response to geopolitical genocide and ethnic cleansing by racial supremacists stealing one’s homeland by force – “just” about everything.
Be clear. Specifically targeting no killing civilians is justifiable? Is that what you mean?
Conveniently selective reading comprehension and endless shit filled straw reveals a worthless paid troll, pretending it possesses reason.
Go “stab” yourself in the eye.
That’s a simple question. Is it just to specifically target and kill innocent civilians? If you are incapable of answering it, then feel free to ignore it,
No, simple is the childish pretense my first reply contained only it’s last 3 words. Similar to the idea that ONLY your occupying and land-thieving racial supremacists somehow have innocent civilians being intentionally targeted in an ethnic-cleansing invasion of Palestine, oh yeah, they started and have so far refused to end. I’m not surprised you’re so ideologically tight with the racial bigot CS-chickenshit (I’m sorry, was that out loud? I meant CraigSummers), the only commenter I’ve yet seen use the “n-word” here at TI at all – and quite inappropriately when referring to slaves too, I might add.
Good on you, or whatever.
Again, if you are unable to answer a question you can just ignore it.
Steb, you poltroon, few here are going to let you control the terms of the discussion, including the questions. Resist this as you like, but it will remain reality.
I have no interest in controlling anything here. I ask questions and I comment on different subjects. I also urge those who cannot respond to my questions or comments with anything substantial to just ignore them. I think that is very fair. For instance, I think you should ignore what a “goose” a “Zionist” a ” poltroon” has to say. Your energy should be focused on clapping for Mr Greenwald and not wasted on calling others names, unless that is your only area of expertise.
Once again, you can’t pretend to be any denser than that just to get your troll on. Though I can’t help but pity any head that apparently craves repeated bruising while finding walls so obsessively attractive…
Again, feel free to ignore the question if you are unable to answer it. You spend a lot of time and energy focusing your poor imagination on me. I am not really sure what you gain out of it.
Steb, he shouldn’t answer it. Certainly not until you quote the specific policy language about killing civilians that you purport exists.
It would be interesting to see that. I’d like to compare it with Yitzhak Shamir’s 1943 article advocating terrorism as proper for use by Jewish Zionists in Palestine. If, that is, such language from contemporary pro-Palestinian groups actually exists.
( looking the meaning of the word “poltroon” up. Someone said that is what Stab is…Is that right Stab? )
Patt hunnee Stub iz vurchual poltroonery inn moshun don u no.
It’s been Zionist policy since day one. Civilians had to be killed and ethnically cleansed from their land to make way for the ethno-religious supremacist state of Israel. They still are killed. As Moshe Dayan said in 1956 at a eulogy for a soldier killed by Gazans:
Dayan understood why Gazans were victims who would want to “reach Zionist blood.” It only follows when your group (Zionists) treats another group (Palestinians) that way. Attacking the settlers of stolen land is what indigenous people have always done to colonialist land thieves.
I am not interested in your Zionist Tourette. I am curious to know whether specifically targeting and killing civilians as Palestinian Terrorists do according to their official policy and as the ANC DID NOT DO, is justified?
The ANC supports BDS and the Palestinians; ask them why. As for me, I’m interested in Zionist killing of Palestinians to steal land, and of the gross mistreatment of the survivors in places such as Gaza.
The ANC has stated multiple times throughout history it is against the targeting and killing of civilians. So, it has already answered that question. Many taxpayers, many governments around the world support Palestinians without supporting Palestinian terrorists. I find it very interesting and shocking that you are unable to state clearly whether specifically targeting and killing civilians is justified.
I find it very interesting and shocking that you are unable to state clearly whether specifically targeting and killing civilians is justified
I find it shocking and horrifying that Zionist terrorists before the State of Israel existed, and the nation-state afterward, have targeted civilians for killing and ethnic cleansing to steal the Arab civilians’ land.
I find it shocking and horrifying that Zionist terrorists before the State of Israel existed, and the nation-state afterward, have targeted civilians for killing and ethnic cleansing to steal the Arab civilians’ land.
(My kingdom for a preview and/or edit button.)
Again, is it just to specifically target and kill civilians as Palestinian terrorists state in their official policy?
Please quote the relevant language from this purported policy.
Actually Mona, you may ignore the question. I forgot you are an ignorant lapdog who suffers Zionist Tourette. Since you have presented yourself as the one with the ultimate knowledge of the Israel Palestinian conflict, I thought you were aware of Al Aqsa Martyr Brigade, Islamic Jihad of Palestine and many other terrorist groups’ positions after they specifically targeted and killed civilians in bus stations, tourist resorts, holiday festivities…just go back to your clapping routine.
Translation: Steb cannot locate any actual policy statements from pro-Palestinian groups endorsing killing civilians.
I am interested in the difference between those that allegedly target civilians on purpose and do such a piss-poor job of it, and those who claim not to, but are supremely effective at mass killing of men women and children… all by accident and using ugly euphemisms like “collateral damage”.
Very similar to the accusation that Hamas uses human shields as a justification for mass murder and other war crimes… when there is more evidence of Israel using human shields than of Hamas doing so.
Those that support the powerful as they crush the weak must have something to fall back on… too bad it is so fucking pathetic and sad. On the other hand, they are transparently guilty of supporting mass murder, at least to anyone paying attention to facts instead of propaganda.
So, the answer is….????
The answer is, that our dweeb Steb cannot locate any actual policy statements from pro-Palestinian groups endorsing killing civilians.
The question is, “Who gives a shite?”
If I were an alien from another planet and THIS is the outcome of “informed debate” I would skate on over to the moon to take a crap, on the hidden side, not stopping in this shit shack. Given this glorious opportunity to be read for eternity and throughout the galaxy, one has only to scratch their head and ask, “This is why Moby wants to kill Ahab?”
Please, someone, put these whalers out of business! How bloody does this water have to get?
Sharon Weinberg is a PNAC supporter. What is she doing on your editorial staff!?
Free Buzz !
Glenn, when will there be new revelations published from the Snowden archives?
” … but what independently interests me about Risen is how he seems to have become entirely radicalized by what he’s discovered in the last decade of reporting, as well as by the years-long battle he has had to wage with the U.S. government to stay out of prison.” ~ Greenwald
Throughout my lifetime I have witnessed a State (government) that has become increasingly totalitarian, brutal, capricious, and demented. At times I have seen reporters who have “become entirely radicalized” by what they have seen. One could say that of Risen and perhaps, to some extent, Greenwald.
And yet, so many commentators here and elsewhere seem to think that all we have to do is elect some “good people” and get the State to “follow the constitution”. Oh well. So many people would love to believe that “democracy” done right will be heaven on earth. Good luck with that. As Lysander Spooner pointed out a long, long time ago, “But whether the Constitution really be one thing, or another, this much is certain – that it has either authorized such a government as we have had, or has been powerless to prevent it. In either case, it is unfit to exist.” I wonder what he would say today!
Where is the dough?
On September 10, 2001, then Defence Secretary Rumsfeld announced that 2.3 Trillion – ‘ trillion’ here is not a typo – could not be accounted for. The following day, a plane hit the Pentagon, piercing through the very office that would have conducted an investigation into the matter. No one has said to this day where the money went.
But today, in just a month, a remote torture campaign that consists of a minimum of 3 aircraft, inflicting indescribable levels of pain in a mind control torture, will have gone on for 5 yrs straight.
Costs? I can only guess. Aircraft maintenance and fuel expenses for 24/7 of surveillance over a period of 5 yrs so far.. 24/7 pilot expenses over that same period. Torturer salaries and bonuses. Disinformation and smear campaign expenses. SIGINT operations costs. Torture psychologist salaries and bonuses. Ground operation team expenses (maintain live video of every move in the house and relay this to the aerial torture base station, ( 7 to 8 cables tapped to my main electric line in the box near my house and leading to the rental house next door). Perp wages and Burger King coupon costs. And much, much more…And this is just for the torture of one person…
In my entire life, I have never seen so much money wasted by so many, for so long, in pursuit of such futile an endevour.
But 2.3 Trillion bucks can surely see this going for a while, even as tax payers await release of a torture report chronicling methods that are barbaric but antiquated in comparison to what thousands of innocent America are remotely being tortured with as we speak.
So, do you have any ideas as to where the money went?
Pat B:
That is a very good question about the $2.3 TRILLION that went missing. I would sure like to know myself. At the same time, the nation continues to spend an estimated $1.2 Trillion annually on military and military related expenditure, which would include the CIA, NSA, Homeland Security, which in turn has made $41 Billion in cash grants to local law enforcement across the nation for any kind of surplus war weaponry it might desire: armored vehicles, drones, grenades, night vision equipment, high powered rifles and scopes, machine guns, ammunition, tear gas, and more! Two enterprising researchers Chris Hellman and Mattea Kramer put together a more complete picture of the nation’s defense spending in 2012 that was published by the Huffington Post in May of 2012: War Pay: The Nearly $1 trillion National Security Budget. (www.huffingtonpost.com/christopher-hellman/us-defense-budget_b_1536401.html) Of course, the wars continue to escalate and multiply. We have just launched our fourth war in Iraq, if we count the sanctions imposed after the first 1990s war in Iraq, and we are in Afghanistan for almost 14 years and now Syria, while the US is also complicit in Israel’s wars against Palestine for decades, for instigating the present conflict in Ukraine against Russia, for imposing sanctions against Iran that amount to acts of war, and on and on the military goes with complete abandon and full funding by what we laughingly call that millionaires club Congress!! Not to mention the covert drone wars of Obomba against Pakistan, Yemen and any other country where one or two “terror” suspects just might exist.
Do we have money for food stamps or any other programs to assist families or the less fortunate? No! Or money to repair the nation’s infrastructure? No! Or money for education? No! Or money for health care? NO!! Or money for the failed Justice Department? No! Or money for the Post Office? NO! Or money for after school programs or day care for single parent families, or for family assistance to parents like Europe, Brazil and even Pakistan provide? NOoooo! How about money for the homeless?
Did you know that UNICEF just came out with a recent report ranking the US 27th among the 41 most affluent nations on a number of factors protecting children? The UNICEF report found that children in poverty increased 2% since the economic meltdown in 2008, so there are now 1.7 million more children in poverty than in 2008, a staggering 31% or 1 US child in 3 lives in poverty in America, the Beautiful, yadayada! There are now an estimate 2,483,000 HOMELESS children living in the US according to the UNICEF report, 2 million more than in 2007!! BUT we’ve got money for wars up the wazzooo! There are homeless children in every city and county of every state in the Union, including the District of Columbia. Now that’s the mark of a great country. Billionaires like Boner and Ihofe should be proud, don’t you think!
Where are the coffee mugs?
Six months ago I had 8-10 coffee mugs, all white ceramic, some plain and some with decorative indentation marks around them. I bought them at Bed, Bath and Beyond, and Ikea, respectively. Where are they now? I know they have not emigrated from the household in automobiles, because they are too big and fat to fit into any of the household automobile cup holders. I know they have not been destroyed by the swarm of young boys that infests this house, because they (the boys) are too short to reach the coffee mug shelf. I know they have not been broken during use, because, if they had, I would know about it.
So, do you have any ideas about where the coffee mugs went?
Thank you Mr. Risen for setting an example of journalism far above the standard our citizens deserve. I use a different term for the War on Terror and the zealots who have brought us the euphemism “privatization” with its morass of conspirators and often criminal business enterprises referred to variously as contractors, subcontractors, consultants, analysts, lobbyists and their corrupt politicians. At the risk of sharing a parable heard, I would remind some readers whose education did not include Fascism, that when government, say the U.S. Government for example, favors business enterprises to the detriment of the rights and interests of the people that government is supposed to serve, that meets the definition of Fascism!
I have not yet had the privilege to read Pay Any Price, but I have read The Puzzle Palace and State of War by Mr. Risen and have closely followed the maltreatment he has received at the hands of the last two administrations, along with other important journalists.
I realized that O’bomba was not my candidate for election in 2008 when he had obviously made a deal to get the Pentagon’s good war-mongering seal of approval by agreeing to ramp up the war in Afghanistan while wrapping up W’s and the Pentagon’s loss of the war in Iraq. Excerpts from the early democratic debates, which are still available online, clearly show that Dennis Kucinich was the candidate for any thinking citizen.
So I have a different take on Mr. Risen’s opinion in Pay Any Price that: “Fear has convinced the White House and Congress to pour hundreds of billions of dollars . . . into counterterrorism and homeland security programs, often with little management or oversight, and often to the detriment of the Americans they are supposed to protect.” Instead, I would argue that the actions of the White House and Congress were not innocent acts of fear, but intentional acts of Fascism, for profit, and had nothing to do with fear!! True, Mr. Risen believes that power and status were also involved in the White House and Congressional decisions to fund atrocious and illegal wars, it is just my feeling that power and status follow the money. And while I agree that there has been a “post 9/11 mercenary class” that has developed, I am thankful for Tim Weiner’s good work in Blank Check (1990) where the military mindset dating back more than fifty years was clearly exposed. Discussing Eisenhower’s demand in 1959 that the Joint Chiefs of Staff “impose some control over the plans for nuclear war,” in November of 1960, General Power came back with the Single Integrated Operational Plan (SIOP): ‘The plan accurately reflected General Power’s thinking. “The whole idea is to kill the bastards!” Power said in December 1960. “At the end of the war, if there are two Americans and one Russian, we win!” [pages 36-37, Blank Check] Now some could argue that Powell was just one insane fanatic US General decades ago, but my opinion is that it is typical of the military mindset, which is basically a fascist mind set. What do the readers think it is?
I also think I understand why our citizens are so complacent about all this. First of all our public and even higher education is rife with propaganda by virtue of vast omissions of important information if nothing else, so our citizens are pretty ignorant and obtain far too much of what they think they know from media and print controlled by a very few corporate entities. Not to single out General Electric, but it does own NBC, MSNBC, all the NBCs, Comcast, various other radio and print medica and if the Time Warner and Comcast merger goes through that will add yet another gargantuan tentacle to the octopus that is the major weapons manufacturer General Electric.
Secondly, many of our citizens are delighted to have a prison or military base in or near their community, because, after all, it helps maintain and perhaps raise the value of their real estate, while supporting local businesses! It seems a majority of our citizens are as addicted to militarism as all of our politicians are. A very good essay on how engrained militarism has become in the US economic and daily existence of our citizens has been written by Michael Fitzgerald: The Permanent War: Militarism and the American Way of Life (2012) found at http://www.michaelrayfitzgerald.com/?p=237
I really wanted to keep this short, but I also want to emphasize the importance of how insidious “privatization” has become, because it is a significant means to re-distribute money from the 95% to the top 5%, resulting in the income inequality that even Ms. Yellen has finally taken note of.
I won’t bore you with a list of corporate contractors hired by W and Cheney to service their wars and covert wars world wide, you can read about that in Tim Shorrock’s Spies for Hire and other good books. Well maybe not, as Allan Dulles derisive remark on the publication of his investigation report on the assassination of John Kennedy was published: “Americans don’t read!”
You may want to hold this thought heading into the 2016 election: Privatization is a tool of fascism.
Well said.
Nationalization is also a tool of fascism.
Fascism considers the strength of the group to be paramount – which is evident from its root “fascio” – “in consideration of the group”. It therefore doesn’t consider government, the people and business to be rivals, but rather as entities in a collective enterprise. To foster cohesiveness to strengthen the group, it is necessary to maintain a continual state of conflict against outsider groups (both internal and external). So much for elementary theory.
The interesting question is whether the current enrichment of the elite is indeed Fascist or merely the manifestation of a dysfunctional kleptocracy. The argument that it’s Fascist is more interesting. In the past, having a committed citizenry, willing to fight for their country was a necessary component of strengthening the group. However, with the anticipated development of autonomous fighting machines on land, air and sea, the individual soldier has become less important. So maintaining the citizenry in fighting form, not only becomes a lower priority, but at some point, a determination may be made that resources expended in this effort could be more productive elsewhere. Fascism does not inherently favor capitalism, but if capital is creating the automated factories that manufacture drones, then it must be rewarded so it can dedicate even more resources to this task.
“So maintaining the citizenry in fighting form, not only becomes a lower priority, but at some point, a determination may be made that resources expended in this effort could be more productive elsewhere.”
The truly cynical might even wonder about some nefarious link, Duce, between the advent of autonomous war machines and feds finally ending their truly insane prohibition rhetoric against cannabis…
Of course it is a manufactured farce of two fronts both funded by same interests, Benito, to fool the faithful into dying for expanding and maintaining our wealth and strength.
http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9C01E4D7143AEF33A25754C2A9679C946996D6CF
Here’s Skuncle making it safe to put your money into Russia in 1918, but by 1934, his daughter is helping to fund America’s first fascist org, The American Liberty League. Didn’t you read about the Nazi spa behind the smoking hot Red Door? Who’d think a Camel’s back could hide a fascist shack? Good thing they burned it down so the Phoenician could rise. No Maltese curse lurking there, right McCain?
Re: Stuart MacGregor II > 29 Nov 2014 at 11:34 am
An excellent and well referenced comment….Thank you!
As Benito Mussolini on 29 Nov 2014 at 2:13 pm suggests in his reply below (in pertinent part)
“Work is love made visible.” KG
As Usual,
EA
Thank you Mr. Risen for setting an example of journalism far above the standard our citizens deserve. I use a different term for the War on Terror and the zealots who have brought us the euphemism “privatization” with its morass of conspirators and often criminal business enterprises referred to variously as contractors, subcontractors, consultants, analysts, lobbyists and their corrupt politicians. At the risk of sharing a parable heard, I would remind some readers whose education did not include Fascism, that when government, say the U.S. Government for example, favors business enterprises to the detriment of the rights and interests of the people that government is supposed to serve, that meets the definition of Fascism!
I have not yet had the privilege to read Pay Any Price, but I have read The Puzzle Palace and State of War by Mr. Risen’s and have closely followed the maltreatment he has received at the hands of the last two administrations, along with other important journalists.
I realized that O’bomba was not my candidate for election in 2008 when he had obviously made a deal to get the Pentagon’s good war-mongering seal of approval by agreeing to ramp up the war in Afghanistan while wrapping up W’s and the Pentagon’s loss of the war in Iraq. Excerpts from the early democratic debates, which are still available online, clearly show that Dennis Kucinich was the candidate for any thinking citizen.
So I have a different take on Mr. Risen’s opinion in Pay Any Price that: “Fear has convinced the White House and Congress to pour hundreds of billions of dollars . . . into counterterrorism and homeland security programs, often with little management or oversight, and often to the detriment of the Americans they are supposed to protect.” Instead, I would argue that the actions of the White House and Congress were not innocent acts of fear, but intentional acts of Fascism, for profit, and had nothing to do with fear!! True, Mr. Risen believes that power and status were also involved in the White House and Congressional decisions to fund atrocious and illegal wars, it is just my feeling that power and status follow the money. And while I agree that there has been a “post 9/11 mercenary class” that has developed, I am thankful for Tim Weiner’s good work in Blank Check (1990) where the military mindset dating back more than fifty years was clearly exposed. Discussing Eisenhower’s demand in 1959 that the Joint Chiefs of Staff “impose some control over the plans for nuclear war,” in November of 1960, General Power came back with the Single Integrated Operational Plan (SIOP): ‘The plan accurately reflected General Power’s thinking. “The whole idea is to kill the bastards!” Power said in December 1960. “At the end of the war, if there are two Americans and one Russian, we win!” [pages 36-37, Blank Check] Now some could argue that is just one insanely fanatic US General decades ago, but my opinion is that it is typical of the military mindset, which is basically a fascist mind set. What do the readers think it is?
I also think I understand why our citizens are so complacent about all this. First of all our public and even higher education is rife with propaganda by virtue of vast omissions of important information if nothing else, so our citizens are pretty ignorant and obtain far too much of what they think they know from media and print controlled by a very few corporate entities. Not to single out General Electric, but it does own NBC, MSNBC, all the NBCs, Comcast, various other radio and print medica and if the Time Warner and Comcast merger goes through that will add yet another gargantuan tentacle to the octopus that is the major weapons manufacturer General Electric.
Secondly, many of our citizens are delighted to have a prison or military base in or near their community, because, after all, it helps maintain and perhaps raise the value of their real estate, while supporting local businesses! It seems a majority of our citizens are as addicted to militarism as all of our politicians are. A very good essay on how engrained militarism has become in the US economic and daily existence of our citizens has been written by Michael Fitzgerald: The Permanent War: Militarism and the American Way of Life (2012) found at http://www.michaelrayfitzgerald.com/?p=237
I really wanted to keep this short, but I also want to emphasize the importance of how insidious “privatization” has become, because it is a significant means to re-distribute money from the 95% to the top 5%, resulting in the income inequality that even Ms. Yellen has finally taken note of.
I won’t bore you with a list of corporate contractors hired by W and Cheney to service their wars and covert wars world wide, you can read about that in Tim Shorrock’s Spies for Hire and other good books. Well maybe not, as Allan Dulles derisive remark on the publication of his investigation report on the assassination of John Kennedy was published: “Americans don’t read!”
You may want to hold this thought heading into the 2016 election: Privatization is a tool of fascism.
Can anyone fathom the depth of despair the arguments of Mona and her foils embroil for those who wonder why their shite stinks before such a massive smoldering pile? If you wanted to get folks to leave the scene, you nailed it, GCHQ. I can barely stand reading here just to write to you. You know how to empty a church well, too.
Seriously folks, this has been going on relentlessly since they got started, this fucking boar war. Is there no moderator who can relieve us of these turbulent beasts?
I am thankful for an open line to GCHQ. When you learn to deny access before it is stolen, let me know, TI. I’ll read you when I can’t read myself in your inbox. Until then, it’s dismal swamp time for you GCHQ. I’m gonna Dunker your ass in German, you lazy fucks! You’ll never know when I’m hipping you to the goat sucker’s ball!
Willkommen to the Number 1 space to rest your weary heads, meine Damen und Herren. Can you fucking get over getting over US?
Germany! I LOVE U! Let’s kick Britain’s ass and remind them who’s BOSS, Saxons!
Hay, GCHQ, even the Guardian says you Guys are copping our goose in unison.
I suggest you go shove a Cornstalk up your asses, then Darth Vader, and then we’ll see who gets to curse the day you shipped us here. We are not your allies, iceholes! Our government may sell out to you, but we will not forget how many times you turned us against ourselves to advance your divide the conquered sour grapes. You suck, pucker ups!
Sincerely,
An Indian.
Am I right, Tata? Let’s blow these fucking aliens’ cover story
Mona
“……The Jewish Zionists of Israel are an ongoing, vile oppressor. The ANC killed innocents, too. Sometimes horrifically….”
There is only one current conflict in the world that I have heard you support (justify) the murder of innocent people – Israel – and, once again, you made the false connection between Israel and South Africa. The left advances preferred narratives by willfully distorting the truth in support of social change. A good example is the shooting of Michael Brown where a white police officer was convicted by the left wing media of gunning down an unarmed black man in cold blood with his hands up – surrendering. The pictures of African American protesters carrying signs with their hands raised in the air (“hands up, hands up; don’t shoot, don’t shoot”) are etched in our collective memories, but this was far from the truth as the grand jury determined. Social justice dwarfs inconveniences in this case – like the truth – for the greater good of society.
This same fabrication of preferred story-lines is part and parcel to the Israel-Palestinian conflict as Ian Pappe – a far left wing Israeli historian and political activist – freely admits. Ian Pappe, writes about “facts”:
“……..Ilan Pappe, a history lecturer at the University of Haifa, freely admits that, in his view, facts are irrelevant when it comes to the history of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. “Indeed the struggle is about ideology, not about facts, Who knows what facts are? We try to convince as many people as we can that our interpretation of the facts is the correct one, and we do it because of ideological reasons, not because we are truthseekers,” Pappe said in an interview with the French newspaper Le Soir, Nov. 29, 1999…….”
Pappe takes “advocacy journalism” to new heights.
Murder of innocent people is justified by the left in support of bringing down a vile system of government like South African Apartheid which was a system of separation by race supported by laws. Sometimes change requires extreme measures. This is the reason Mona supports the murder of Jews in Israel. However, she can only support murder if the Jewish state is perceived as “vile” as South Africa, thus the reason she advances a fabricated narrative i.e., the governments of Israel and South Africa are really one in the same. Murder of innocent Jews may not be the best course of action, but it is the only viable course of action remaining to bring down the Jewish State – and well worth the cost to bring social justice to Palestine.
Super duper example from you of why it isn’t my words or anyone’s words but your own that drive the point home that you are laugh out loud dishonest or painfully lacking in ability to differentiate between facts and from what you want to believe, or have others believe. As I and the world has told you, the absurd Grand Jury and the corrupt prosecutor, Robert Mcculloch, don’t own the truth. Only a stooge or an idiot would, as you did with absolute certainty, say otherwise.
Why I Believe the Grand Jury Got it Wrong and Injustice Triumphed
“…..As I and the world has told you, the absurd Grand Jury and the corrupt prosecutor, Robert Mcculloch, don’t own the truth…..”
Of course they don’t Kitt – so go ahead and pick the narrative that best fits your ideological agenda. In the case of Michael Brown, the justice system was damned no matter what the outcome of the grand jury. Damned because if the jurors elected to indict Wilson, that was ample proof of the injustice in our system i.e., another young black man killed unjustly by the police. But the jurors were also damned because they voted not to indict Wilson – which just verified continued injustice toward black Americans – and this was just one more example. Wilson was convicted of murder by the left wing media no matter what the decision by the grand jury. The media ran with that story (just read the title to the article by Ryan Devereaux in the Intercept!). Hanna Giorgis writing in the Guardian clearly expresses these feelings (prior to the decision by the grand jury):
“…….At some point in the next few days, it’s likely that Darren Wilson will not be indicted, by the US justice department or the state of Missouri, for the extrajudicial killing of Michael Brown…….”
According to Ms. Giorgis, there can be no justice without conviction because the shooting was an “extrajudicial killing” – even though Ms. Giorgis clearly didn’t have access to (all of) the facts in the case. Only the grand jury was privy to all of the known facts in the case – the investigation by several police departments and the eye witnesses – but as you and many others on the left have shown, facts are irrelevant to “social justice”.
Thanks Kitt
The result was actually a splendid vindication of the US justice system, which proved once again its flexibility and capacity to produce any desired outcome.
Normally, a Grand Jury is asked to determine whether there is sufficient evidence to indict. The prosecutor’s role is to present only the evidence which supports the prosecution’s case – the evidence for the defense is presented at trial.
In the Ferguson case, the Grand Jury was asked to determine whether there was sufficient evidence to acquit, with the Prosecutor acting as the Defense Attorney. The prosecution’s case will never be presented at trial, because there will be no trial.
They are in fact privy only to the facts which the Prosecutor chooses to present to them. The job of the Prosecutor is to present only the facts which supports the prosecution’s case. If the Grand Jury was in fact privy to all the known facts, then the Prosecutor was not acting as a prosecutor. This as I mentioned above, shows the tremendous ability of the US justice system to produce a desired result, while maintaining the full dignity of the law and the primacy of due process.
Those objecting to this process are only venting their displeasure that the result did not conform to their ideological prejudices.
“……They are in fact privy only to the facts which the Prosecutor chooses to present to them…..”
Well, this might normally be true Benito. Just because the special prosecutor chose a different (and legal) route certainly doesn’t mean he selectively presented evidence to acquit Wilson. On the contrary, this case is of special importance to the justice department. The FBI conducted an independent investigation. Lawyers might be thieves, but they are anything but stupid. The prosecutor allowed the grand jury to determine what – if any – charges to bring against Wilson by presenting all of the evidence to the grand jury.
But that misses the point of what I said. What the grand jury determined is irrelevant to the preferred story that Wilson murdered Michael Brown in cold blood. This was the point of the “hands up, hands up; don’t shoot, don’t shoot” narrative (cold blooded murder) advanced by the left wing media. This particular picture of injustice, which was not supported by the evidence, will continue long after we all die of old age. Jesse Jackson posted an article in the Guardian after the grand jury announced their decision – and shockingly – the picture used in the article is of two hands held up to the sky.
The Michael Brown shooting is not about truth, it’s about social justice and change. If a fictional account of the shooting accomplishes that goal, then it was worth labeling Wilson a murderer. As Mona pointed out, sometimes innocent people are necessarily sacrificed in the name of justice.
Thanks Benito
Presenting all the evidence is not a Grand Jury proceedings – it slows the process down and turns it into a trial. So my question would be: what are the advantages of this system over a normal trial?
First, it eliminates the adversarial nature of the justice system. Prosecutors and Defense Attorneys often have very different world views. By combining those roles into the person of the prosecutor, you get a more reasonable, balanced view.
Secondly, the proceedings are conducted in secret. This protects the process from the unwelcome scrutiny of the scurrilous social media – whom McCulloch so rightly castigated. Having open proceedings allows everyone to become a critic, as many people unfortunately assume they are as capable of judging the facts as the next person. By suppressing the facts, you force people to place their faith in a superior authority – which leads to a more smoothly functioning society (providing you can silence the elements in the social media which are working to undermine confidence in that system).
Benito
The prosecutor has come under criticism for the manner in which he conducted the grand jury proceedings. It was unusual in that his job normally is to present one-sided evidence which supports the indictment of an individual charged with a crime. That he chose a different route is his choice as the prosecutor – and how he conducted the grand jury proceedings was perfectly legal. Importantly, ALL of the evidence was presented to the grand jury. This included the work of the FBI and the St. Louis Police Department. McCulloch certainly must have understood that he would come under tremendous scrutiny and criticism for that decision. None the less, he felt it was the best way to reach a fair decision in a controversial case.
Defense Attorney, David Figler writing in PandoDaily:
“…….While everyone is understandably furious about the outcome of this Grand Jury, it could in fact serve as a shining example of how these proceedings can be conducted. That defendants of all race, economic status and station in life can be guaranteed the presumption of innocence though every proceeding. Consistent with this proceeding, the Missouri legislature could, and should, require exculpatory evidence to be presented in every case. Consistent with the deliberation, possible defenses should be required to be given as part of the Grand Jury’s instructions. Consistent with the suspect’s treatment, every suspect should be given a free pass to give a favorable narrative……….Bob McCulloch goes to sleep at night knowing he gave Officer Wilson the fairest Grand Jury proceeding that no law requires, but his moral drive allowed. Likely, had this degree of evidence been presented to a full Criminal Jury with defense attorneys working their magic, Wilson would have been acquitted or at least there would have been a hung jury…….”
McCollock has released thousands of pages of grand jury testimony which he had promised to do. So the public can go over all of the testimony and evidence to decide for themselves. In fact, the grand jury could not even find enough evidence to support a charge of involuntary manslaughter let alone murder. In other words, the shooting was justified although tragic.
This is in sharp contrast to the left wing media which long ago tried Wilson and convicted him of extrajudicial murder.
Thanks.
Defense Attorneys are not noted for their strategic acumen. What this one fails to realize, is that if you turn the Grand Jury proceedings into a trial conducted by the Prosecutor, then there is no need for real trials, and hence no need for Defense Attorneys.
Fair enough Benito
Thanks.
Mona did not point that out. What I said was persons acting in the name of a just cause have sometimes killed innocents, sometimes horrifically.
There was no “special” prosecutor, notwithstanding the demands for one, and the clear need for it. Had there been, the absurd trial of Michael Brown that the grand jury proceedings became would almost certainly not have happened.
I’d explain to you why your comment is bull shit, but I’m pretty damn sure that you already know, so I won’t bother.
Benito Mussolini’s comment post might be somewhat helpful to you though. Do you walk around in public talking like you post on this comment board? I doubt it because there are few who can — on a daily basis — withstand face-to-face encounters with crowds of people who hold them up as an example of all that is wrong with the world.
Thanks Kitt
Another compelling argument…..
To that specific point: 16 out of 29 witnesses testifying at the GJ said that Brown had his hands up. Now, I wasn’t one of those witnesses so I can’t offer an eye witness account of that. But one thing I can say about what I’ve quoted from you above is, under the circumstances, that’s one hell of a foolish claim to make.
Kitt
And according to the other thirteen, where were Michael Brown’s hands? However, even the Intercept posted a qualifier for eye witness accounts in their conviction of Wilson – and just to point out the disconnect between eye witness accounts and reality, the St. Louis Post Dispatch posted the testimony by one eye witness:
“……..[…] A landscape worker who lives in Jefferson County gave grand jurors one of the oddest accounts of the moments leading up to Brown’s death. The man had appeared in widely broadcast video in which he is wearing a pink shirt and gesturing to police that Brown’s hands were up.
The man said he encountered Brown that morning. He was trying to cut through some tree roots and cursing at the difficulties of the job. Brown told him that Jesus would help him with his anger problem.
A few minutes later, the man said, he heard gunshots. He looked up and saw Brown running. He said three officers were chasing Brown, but only one of them was shooting. Brown appeared to have been shot as he fled, the worker said. Then Brown turned around, put his hands up and started yelling “OK.”
“And within a couple of seconds the three officers came up, and one just pulled up and shot him,” the worker said…….”
One of the sixteen, Kitt?
I wouldn’t know. Because you left no link I don’t even know if what you supposedly quoted is for real or just some drunken rant someone made up and posted somewhere. It doesn’t change anything either way. But what I do know is that it wasn’t me claiming the following about ‘Hands up Don’t Shoot': “this was far from the truth as the grand jury determined.” And then it wasn’t me walking that back by trying to ignore the fact that more than half of the eye witnesses testifying to that GJ said he had his hands up. And then it wasn’t me walking it back even more to one unattributed quotation, as if that warrants your celebratory “I win! I win! I win!” remark of, “One of the sixteen?” Insufferable.
You still don’t get it Kitt. Did you see any of the 13 who testified to the grand jury mentioned by Ryan Devereaux? They are completely ignored by the press because they don’t fit the preferred story. Ryan (clearly without all of the facts in the case) laid out what he knew about the killing of Michael Brown. The title of the article says it all: ““DOWN OUTRIGHT MURDER”: A COMPLETE GUIDE TO THE SHOOTING OF MICHAEL BROWN BY DARREN WILSON”. Mr. Devereaux falsely implied in the title that Brown was murdered. He also falsely claimed that this was a complete guide to the killing of Brown. This was the lying left at its best hiding behind the mantra of Greenwald – advocacy journalism. Forget about the grand jury who were exposed to all of the evidence in the case: Ryan Devereaux knows best.
Sorry, but justice does not occur in a far left wing publication with an ideological agenda. The Intercept was not alone, however. Indeed, news outlets throughout the world showed numerous photos of African Americans with their hands raised to the sky or holding signs saying: “hands up, hands up; don’t shoot, don’t shoot”. Article after article carried the same pictures which put the American justice system on trial to the world, but the grand jury could not even indict Wilson on involuntary manslaughter let alone murder. Insufferable indeed, Kitt.
Craig, let me guess. You got that quote off the CAMERA website. You did, didn’t you? You ought not to read that stuff: it will turn your mind to mush.
That quote seems very taken out-of-context and distorted to me – at least the way it’s presented by CAMERA. I would be interested to see how it would read in its original context.
Craig, you shameless zio-shill. As you know very well, the ANC itself firmly insists that Israel practices apartheid — or a form of oppression against the palestinians even worse than aparthied. I’ve documented this for you many times.
As or your segue into the Michael Brown matter, you appear to have received the hasbara memo; Zionists are currying the favor of white upset over Ferguson and the protests. Indeed, the Times Of Israel blog has published an inadvertently hilarious post, Nine Parallels between Palestine and Ferguson,:
.
Fair enough, Benito
Thanks.
Mona
“…….As or your segue into the Michael Brown matter, you appear to have received the hasbara memo; Zionists are currying the favor of white upset over Ferguson and the protests. Indeed, the Times Of Israel blog has published an inadvertently hilarious post, Nine Parallels between Palestine and Ferguson…..”
I missed the memo I guess. I haven’t read the Times of Israel article. In fact, I have never read a Times of Israel article except ones that might have been posted by other posters – like you. However, you never answered my post. You just tried to discredit it by associating with a TOI article (and referring to me as hasbara – another left wing lie) – which it was not. The only parallel that I see between Ferguson and Palestine is just what I pointed out: truth is the first casualty as in the “apartheid analogy”, but as Pappe pointed out, it’s for the greater social good.
Israel supported the Apartheid South African government which is why ANC leaders continue to spout nonsense about Israel. Mandela in 1993:
“……The ANC`s relations with the Palestinian Liberation Organisation have been a matter of concern for many Jews, not only here but also in other parts of the world……As a movement we recognise the legitimacy of Palestinian nationalism just as we recognise the legitimacy of the Zionism as a Jewish nationalism. We insist on the right of the state of Israel to exist within secure borders but with equal vigour support the Palestinian right to national self-determination…….The ANC, in common with the international community, was extremely unhappy about the military cooperation between the State of Israel and the apartheid regime in South Africa. The refusal of Israel, over many years, to honour its international obligations to isolate the apartheid regime did influence our attitude towards that government………”
The ANC really has no credibility on when it comes to depicting the government of Israel. The Times of Israel has about as much credibility on Ferguson…..as the Intercept.
Thanks Mona.
It has enormous credibility when it comes to knowing what apartheid is. And how very amusing that you seek to “defend” Israel with the argument that the Jewish State supported apartheid South Africa. This is true, of course, because Israel embraces “superior” white culture appropriating land from darker “inferiors.” Such is the foundation of Zionism.
Mona
“……This is true, of course, because Israel embraces “superior” white culture appropriating land from darker “inferiors.” Such is the foundation of Zionism…..”
Proving once again that the extreme left fabricates narratives for ideological reasons. Creating a homeland for the Jewish people is the foundation of Zionism, Mona.
Yeah, this “narrative” was recited by that well-known left-wing ideologue, Moshe Dayan, in 1956 at a eulogy for a Zionist soldier who had been killed by Gazans:
Dayan was a realist, and understood exactly that the Palestinians were dangerous to Israelis because the latter had stolen the former’s land and locked survivors into refugee territories.
The truth about Zionism, Craig, has been spilling out all over, online and increasingly from mainstream books. Plenty of Zionists back in the day provide quotes such as Dayan’s. So you can yammer all you like about “leftist narratives,” but the truth is coming in waves, and cannot be stopped.
Craig Summers, fortunately your ignorance, or blatant lies about the ANC persuades no one here or anywhere as your statements are so divorced from facts that they would be laughable if not so sad.
Go read something. I feel dirty just responding to this.
Hi Pat B.
Certainly was good to hear from you. Hope you don’t feel too dirty.
“……Craig Summers, fortunately your ignorance, or blatant lies about the ANC persuades no one here or anywhere as your statements are so divorced from facts that they would be laughable if not so sad……”
Uh….what blatant lies? I just repeated what Mandela said which is that the ANC held Israel accountable for their support of the Apartheid government. Thus, when it comes to the ANC labeling Israel worse than apartheid, not only is this a blatant lie, it is most certainly politically motivated – as is Mona’s hatred of the Jewish state.
Thanks.
Yes, Mandela and the ANC saw up close and personal how racist Israel is when that state was in bed with apartheid South Africa. This allowed the ANC to early-on remove rose-colored glasses worn by so many of us Westerners, fed as we have been a long diet of Holocaust guilt and pro-Zionist propaganda in books and film.
Israel is and always has been deeply racist, and Zionists still cling to anti-black themes. See, e.g., this cached post the Times of Israel just took down, written by a Seattle-based American Zionist activist. His racism on the topic of Ferguson is jaw-dropping, but entirely of a piece with Zionist racism in general.
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:http%3A%2F%2Fblogs.timesofisrael.com%2Fnine-parallels-between-palestine-and-ferguson%2F
http://www.hambacher-schloss.de/alleveranstaltungen/details/180-hambacher%20gespr%C3%A4che
Germany, I love you. Please forgive US. We have lost our way. It helps when you don’t buy into that world domination BS, no? Look at YOU, #1!
Dr. Adolf Reed clocked the empty suit in 1996. Historians will struggle to the degree that their reference points remain largely bunk.
’96!
http://www.blackagendareport.com/content/obama-project-and-politics-race
See also this piece from 2004:
http://www.paulstreet.org/?p=1102
This one from late 2008:
A Historic Moment: The Election of the Greatest Con-Man in Recent History
http://petras.lahaine.org/?p=1766
From 2009:
Buying Brand Obama
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20090503_buying_brand_obama
And these three:
The Pretender
https://zcomm.org/znetarticle/the-pretender/
The Con-man Cornered: Obama and the Democratic Debacle of 2014
http://petras.lahaine.org/?p=2012
How the Democrats Became The Party of Neoliberalism
http://www.telesurtv.net/english/opinion/How-the-Democrats-Became-The-Party-of-Neoliberalism-20141031-0002.html
People like to have a choice. But most are uncomfortable if they are given more than one choice – that spurs the angst of indecision. So the press’s job is to present conventional wisdom and allow people to choose it. They do it well. In fact, if the press were to present a range of options, most people would be outraged at this abdication of responsibility. It is the press’s job to winnow out the bad choices and then present the remaining choice for deliberation by the general public.
It’s funny that Mr. Risen wrote a book about the same things that I knew were happening in the time frame that they were actually happening. But, to say anything against it would have been “unpatriotic”. I haven’t read his book, but, it was like déjà vu hearing the interview with Jim Risen. Obama, “W”, Cheney, the Iraq War, the run up the Iraq War, 9-11, and the Clinton era, all have had particular meaning to me in the same way that Risen describes. Homeland Security is a very big “thorn-in-my-side” because of what it is doing to ordinary citizens in this country (making everyone think there is a “terrorist” under every rock) and also, what KBR and Halliburton have done with our tax dollars. A few people (comparatively speaking) have made a “boatload” of money and have robbed a generation of young people of what could have been their “American Dream”. And, there is no end in sight.
If it weren’t for an incredible military, the U.S. would be just another banana republic. And like most banana republics, most of the good, steady, jobs are in the military/industrial complex. Oh well, the U.S. use to be a great country.
Instead of engaging in the debate I’d just like to make sure someone has said – how very refreshing to hear an intelligent discussion. Bravo
The navy SERE PowerPoint presentation could not have been clearer:
Why is torture the worst interrogation method?
Produces unreliable information
Negative world opinion
Subject to war crimes trials
Used as a tool for compliance
That is a one sided analysis; here are the positive aspects of torture.
Boosts morale.
Possible nomination for the Dick Cheney citizenship award.
Qualifies you as an honorary member of the APA.
You will receive an autographed copy of “Why Terrorism Works: Understanding the Threat, Responding to the Challenge” by Alan Dershowitz, wherein he justifies torture.
“The Jewish Zionists of Israel are an ongoing, vile oppressor. The ANC killed innocents, too. Sometimes horrifically.
The ANC’s cause was just, and so is that of the Palestinians.” Mona
I think you should clarify that you do not support terrorist acts against civilians because those statements can be perceived as a justification for killing innocent civilians.
And I think you should stick a swizzle stick up your butt hole and twirl.
This is so sad to see you going down that way Mona! Since the ANC killed innocent civilians then it is justified for Palestinian terrorists to specifically target and kill innocent Israelis? Here is what Mbeki stated about the death of civilians by the ANC military wing.
“The ANC has acknowledged that in a number of instances breaches in policy did occur and deeply regrets civilians casualties. The leadership took steps to halt operations in conflict with policy,”
If you had any decency you would have compared the ANC policies towards civilians with that of Hamas, which made it clear it will target all Israelis or whomever it believes to be Israelis. Again, that would be too much to ask you as a lapdog!
You obviously know absolutely nothing about the ANC.
( Looking for s “swizzle stick” to give to Stab.)
Still twirling, Steb? That’s it…faster…faster! By gawd, yer becoming a Dervish, Steb! (Careful, that’s teh creeping sharia!)
I’d like to say this doesn’t sound like Mona, not bitchy enough. What are you mixing, Mona? Should we be concerned?
Like she isn’t the biggest bore tender on the planet with that cheap bottle rocketry package. Look’s like she’s served that BS so often, everyone thinks it’s her favorite bubbling drink!
Stab, your thrash talk has strained my eyes to the limit. Now your portrayal of the ANC , which never would have existed had the abomination called Apartheid never been crafted into existence first, as bad – or implying that it was – crosses the line.
Stay within bounds and you will do just fine.
Excuse me! What’s my portrayal of the ANC? All I did was to report a clear fact that the ANC killed innocent civilians, but it was not part of their policy to target civilians. This is according to their leaders who clearly stated they regretted the loss of civilian lives. Am I wrong? That is completely different from Palestinian terrorists who do not attack military targets, but specifically target, kill civilians and praise themselves for doing so. You should ask Mona why she would associate the ANC struggle with those who find it normal to kill pedestrians crossing the street.
“…but it was not part of their policy to target civilians ..
” (ANC). This is what I wished you had mentioned earlier . Would have saved me from pounding the keyboard responding to you. But to your credit, you just did.
As you can now see, I don’t let anyone eff around with the ANC.
NYT has a story on secrecy and civil liberties threats in Oz and NZ, prominent mention of Snowden and Glenn. On point here as a sidebar, as this is about more threats to press freedom and the Nicky Hager affair in NZ, which I believe TI has mentioned before. Also, NYT seems to be having some qualms.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/28/opinion/civil-liberties-in-peril-down-under.html
A Yes Minister quote! Bravo!
” … political self-interest — which serves no one except the powers that be — is just as important a factor. — NYT”
———
Which is why those who are in power also need to groom their inner selves so that they reflect the higher qualities of selflessness, detachment from power and control and resources and land, generosity, truthfulness, humility, love, and serving others without any expectations, etc.
As Imam Ali said: The best person to hold a position of power and authority is the one who has no desire for them.
When a peasant living in a remote village, say in Peru, reflects these higher qualities, the goodness they spread is limited.
But if politicians, especially those who are governing, reflect them, the positive effects will be wider and deeper.
These higher qualities are universal and transcend religious and non religious boundaries.
“THANK YOU” Edward Snowden, Chelsea Manning, John Kiriakou, Daniel Ellsberg, William Binney and ALL whistleblowers – for your courageous choices.
And “THANK YOU” to ALL journalists choosing to support such conscientious decisions – instead of just being sycophants to The State.
You ALL provide far more meaning for my personal day of national thanks – today, that I call SnowMann Day, than the bs myth I was taught about the struggle of invading religious zealots that openly practiced geopolitical germ warfare and slavery. You epitomize what I believe OUR country should be about, ever more truth.
What I consider to have been an important post that addressed a component of the article above, failed to post yesterday, Nov 26 2014.
Once again I do not believe that TheIntercept did this. But there clearly are parties hovering around here to silence any voices they feel uncomfortable with.
If the deliberate suppression of the ideas is intended to discourage the person, then the torture psychologists involved in this abominable mind control operation, and the torture practitioners that they work with, might be wise to know that there is another possible outcome to frustrating someone’s voice other than discouraging them from expressing them: fueling the desire to be heard. Irrespective of how much saddism is piled up on them.
Spot on Pat B.! Martin Seligman was one of the psychologists who designed the “learned helplessness” experiments, where dogs were repeatedly shocked and entered a state of depression when they “learned” there was no way to avoid the random pain. Martin “the dog torturer” has had multiple contracts with the DOD. As you stated, what they failed to take into account is that a certain percentage of humans will not lie in the corner depressed, as the dogs did…they will fight their torturer to the death.
Sharp observation well articulated AG. And if I may add to it, it appears that the DoD that hires the likes of Seligman “the dog torturer”, has yet to realize that the difference between Joe Mainstreet, the lumpen criminal who abducts his victims and tortures them in his smelly shed until the law sends him to rot away in jail, and the torture psychologists they hire to torture and damage the minds and bodies of their innocent fellow citizens, is a Ph. D degree. It is truly the only difference…
What they share is far more than what separates them. They both exhibit psychopathic tendencies. They do not believe that the content of their beliefs has any capacity for persuasion when marketed through the normal mechanisms that democracy offers its society that everybody else uses, so bankrupt their ideas are in anything that could be remotely seen as constructive or beneficial to society. So they resort to force and violence to try to impose their will.
They are devoid of any sense of morality; will spit at the constitution before a foreign enemy ever has a chance to think about it, and they appear to despise all notions underlying all principles of human decency. And this is what APA leadership gave its blessings to via their complicity.
Well said AG. And if I may add, the DoD that hires the likes of “the dog torturer” has yet to realize that the only difference between John Doe who abducts his victim then tortures and sodomizes her in his smelly shed until the law locks him away forever, and a torture psychologist, is that the latter has a Ph.D degree. And has actually invested time and money in the education on ponerology…
The differences between the two human variants are far more fewer than the attributes they share.
They both exhibit psychopathy. They both derive pleasure from the infliction of pain and misery on others.
They both have a deep seated disdain for the sanctity of human life and a corresponding contempt for all of its legal protections. They will spit at the US Constitution long before an external enemy gets a chance to even think about doing so himself.
But most importantly, they do not believe that their ideas stand a chance in the open market that a democracy avails to all of its citizens as a mechanism for social discourse because their ideas have nothing of benefit to society. So they impose their will by torturing their fellow citizens, damaging their bodies and minds. Some die. And in the process, they soil the reputation of their country, leaving it up to the rest of society to clean up.
And the APA leadership condones and approves, while the DoD apparently keeps the hiring line moving along.
Good point. Another slight distinction between the two groups is that John Doe serial killer, who tortures and murders innocents, generally doesn’t get PAID for his work.
I read your later comment about the immense cost of this whole harassment/non-consensual weapons testing program. I ponder those same thoughts everyday. The level of financial expenditure and coordination is massive. Apparently, Mind/Population Control, Torture and Depopulation must be the holy grail of future weapons. That’s why Iran laughed and called nuclear weapons an outdated technology from the last century. I assumed that this operation was funded through a combination of DoD black ops budgets, which are completely without any oversight whatsoever AND private right wing nutter billionaires funneling money through foundations and religious charities. They are rarely audited and the money is difficult to trace, unless it’s a Muslim charity/foundation, then you’re under a microscope.
But I totally forgot about the billions (perhaps trillions) going missing…You’re quite right, it could fund all sorts of off the books operations. Tracing the money and payments is the key to proving that these stalking/experimental weapons testing operations exist.
Life is beautiful, Pat. B. No one here stops me from communicating with GCHQ. But I’d be humiliated to be seen here with Mona and the Buzzkillers.
It would be really refreshing if political commentators would stop using the word “conservative” to pejoratively label persons who favor war.
Truly conservative people in the US have historically opposed foreign wars, and US wars abroad have usually hatched under “progressive” administrations — most often Democratic ones, at that.
As long as “internationalism” remains the favored foundation of US foreign policy, we will be perpetually tipped down that slippery slope into one war after another.
@bh2: I agree that too often “conservative” is used as a pejorative. And you’re right: Wilson, FDR, Truman, JFK, LBJ, Carter, Clinton, and Obama are erroneously thought of as progressives, and yet their foreign policy was aggressive. So what us one to make of these labels of progressive and conservative? Your objection might be more edifying and clarifying if you were to start by identifying the roots of state violence, aggression, and war. It’s not “internationalism,” but rather capitalism, commerce, the “need” for new markets, etc. As Woodrow Wilson said in a moment if can for in 1919, “is there any man here or any woman, let me say is there any child here, who does not know that the seed of war in the modern world is industrial and commercial rivalry?” You gotta read Sidney Lens’ classic “The Forging of the American Empire: From the Revolution to Vietnam” (review here by the brilliant Sherry Wolf, http://socialistworker.org/2003-2/466/466_08_ForgingEmpire.shtml )
Or as Michael Parenti explains in his classic, “Against Empire” (1995), “Why has a professedly peace-loving, democratic nation [i.e., the U.S.] found it necessary to use so much violence and repression against so many peoples in so many places? An important goal of U.S. policy is to make the world safe for the Fortune 500 and its global system of capital accumulation. Governments that strive for any kind of economic independence or any sort of populist redistributive politics, who have sought to take some of their economic surplus and apply it to not-for-profit services that benefit the people–such governments are the ones most likely to feel the wrath of U.S. intervention or invasion.” (Read: http://xa.yimg.com/kq/groups/4625512/917882442/name/michael_parenti_against_empire.pdf)
See as well Noam Chomsky’s “What a Uncle Sam Really Wants” http://www.cyberspacei.com/jesusi/authors/chomsky/sam/sam.htm
Worthwhile:
The Obama Regime’s Fabricated “Terror Conspiracy” in Defense of the Police State
http://petras.lahaine.org/?p=1950
From 12 years ago*
‘War on Terror’ a smokescreen created by the ultimate terrorist, America itself
http://johnpilger.com/articles/-war-on-terror-a-smokescreen-created-by-the-ultimate-terrorist-america-itself
*Glenn: please interview John Pilger
Well, some might say that it would be extremely enlightening if closeted Republicans stopped denigrating traditional conservative principles by employing hypocritical Neo-CONservative political revisionism, while claiming to hold the proverbial moral and ethical high ground.
For instance, saying “refreshing things like:
“Work is love made visible.” KG
As Usual,
EA
Thank you Glenn for this interview with James Risen, for your work with Edward Snowden
and all the other good reporting you carry out. I have No Place to Hide and have read it.
I am 82, served in the US Army during the last 6 months of the Korean War and 17 months
under President Eisenhauer, and my perception of the US and it’s leaders has changed 180
degrees. That change began in the early 70’s when Nixon and Agnew were in power.
I value integrity and credibility and the courage to tell it the way it is. I applaud both you
and James Risen for your performances and actions. I know it is difficult from experience.
Thank you both.
Hugh R. Hays, PhD
Veteran for Peace, Equality, Justice and Better Government
Dear Glenn,
While I love everything your team and Ed Snowden has accomplished you guys lose MAJOR sympathy points in the heavy handed moderation on your site. Freedom of the press is useless without freedom of speech. Tell these clowns to let people post comments every now and then! Nothing I type ever gets posted but the same names post over and over and over again, (and some of them sound crazy). What is this? A beta-invite only site? GEEZUZ!
Love,
evenflow
I am thrilled that The Intercept may be censoring some, particularly those they think are ‘paid’ to have opinions. Does the First Amendment protect paid opinions? Interesting question.
Not an interesting question.
“THANK YOU” founders, writers and staff of THE // INTERCEPT!!!
Hi,
i don’t know if it was mentioned before but the RSS Feed seems to be broken. I get an “XML Parsing Error: not well-formed”. The last working Update was on 19. November.
Sincerely Yours,
George
Once again Mr. Greenwald, thank you for a thought provoking article! However, I use a different term for the War on Terror and the zealots who have brought us the euphemism “privatization” with its morass of conspirators and often criminal business enterprises referred to variously as contractors, subcontractors, consultants, analysts, lobbyists and their corrupt politicians. At the risk of sharing a parable heard, I would remind some readers whose education did not include Fascism, that when government, say the U.S. Government for example, favors business enterprises to the detriment of the rights and interests of the people that government is supposed to serve, that meets the definition of Fascism!
I have not yet had the privilege to read Pay Any Price, but I have read many of Mr. Risen’s other books, so when he says: “Fear has convinced the White House and Congress to pour hundreds of billions of dollars . . . into counterterrorism and homeland security programs, often with little management or oversight, and often to the detriment of the Americans they are supposed to protect, I would argue that the actions of the White House and Congress are not innocent acts of fear, but intentional acts of Fascism, for profit, and have nothing to do with fear!!
I recently had two examples of privatization in my own life, one with a Medicare claim, where a subcontractor was hired to deny my appeal involving $196 for lab services. What do you suppose Medicare paid the subcontractor? In another instance, my water company raised my bill by 12.5% this year and is now asking for an 18% increase with no end to further increases in sight, and the increases have little to do with the drought. The California Commission that oversees the billionaire owner of the company has guaranteed the corporation “a reasonable rate of return” in this economic downturn, a guaranteed profit, get it, to the detriment of individual water users! These are manifestations of Fascism in our every day lives right now.
Perhaps one of the best essays on how engrained militarism had become in US economic and daily existence has been written by Michael Fitzgerald: The Permanent War: Militarism and the American Way of LIfe (2012) found at http://www.michaelrayfitzgerald.com/?p=237
If our citizens fail to get the message and take action, just imagine what will happen when “Bitch” McConnell and Boner get their fascist hands on Medicare and Social Security next year. Privatization is Fascism: hold the thought!
Wow. I find it really hard to believe that Mr. Scahill voluntarily hangs around this insanity, further diminishing his legitimacy as an actual journalist. ‘Obama is the worst enemy of freedom of the press in HISTORY???? Whatever. Sour grapes.
quote’Wow. I find it really hard to believe that Mr. Scahill voluntarily hangs around this insanity…” unquote
Says one who just put his freshly pulled tooth under his pillow.
First, you should learn how to read and not make up quotes. The quote is Obama is “the greatest enemy of press freedom in a generation”, not “in HISTORY.”
Second, the person who said that is named “Jim Risen.” He works for a newspaper called “The New York Times.”
Jeremy Scahill does not work for “the New York Times,” so he is not actually associating himself with the “insanity” you identify.
Third, that Obama is the worst enemy of freedom of press in a generation is more or less a consensus in American journalism (see here), so it would be very difficult for any working journalist to avoid associating themselves with that view.
Idk Glenn … but I’m leaning toward HISTORY.
~ Happy Thanksgiving
Wow. I find it really hard to believe anyone with a thought process would actually choose that username.
Facts are sometimes stubborn and inconvenient, particularly when they involve one’s personal idols, I suppose, though I admit that I have little to no expertise in matters pertaining to personality worship.
Fascinating subject nonetheless, don’t you agree?
Re: luvbrothel 27 Nov 2014 at 5:21 am
As your hapless screed belies, it is not Mr. Scahill or THE//INTERCEPT that has legitimacy problems.
Where is that damned IGNORE button?
“Work is love made visible.” KG
As Usual,
EA
To change the quote somewhat, it would appear that some would like Reform without the Revolution!
@Mona
Freedom of Speech Mona. you may call me and whomever disagree with your hero Mr Greenwald a Zionist. However, be ready to be laugh at when you attempt to defend yourself when others call you a traitor for being against the War on Terror.
A Zionist?
. . .
Now I have heard everything.
Steb is so unraveled by my dissection of his neo-liberal foreign policy views he’s not drafting his prose in an intelligible manner. He doesn’t mean that Glenn is a Zionist. No, what has Steb upset is that I accurately identify Steb as one. This he finds astonishing and heinous for some reason.
Comma challenged. Likely it was the pressure you put him under, Mona, that prompted his abandonment of the relevant punctuation.
Eats, shoots and leaves
Upset? Actually Mona since English grammar is on the table, laughing is associated with happiness. I am laughing at you. Here we have an individual who spends days, probably years calling others Zionists (even those she does not even know), but has a problem when she is called a traitor! Your arguments against those who call you names even without any reasons are invalid as you have been engaging in the same unsophisticated approach. Moreover, since accuracy is on the table as well (according to Mona it is accurate I am a Zionist even if I wish the Israelis would leave the Palestinian Territories tomorrow) I think it would be very accurate to describe you as Mr Greenwald’s lapdog. I have not seen any comments from you that could suggest that he, as a human being, might be wrong sometimes.
Steb, you fuckwitted goose, no one called me a “traitor” and so I didn’t object to anyone doings so. But even if they had, I don’t whine about it when others call me names. Who gives a shit? Defending myself against silly names and accusations is a waste of time — and I also will not be diverted, which is frequently the hope of those who traffic mostly in name-calling.
No, I almost always ignore that bullshit and drill home on the substance my opponents try to pass off as fact or logic.
And Steb, you are a Zionist. That’s a political label with known content. Your beliefs conform to that known content. Deal.
@ Mona
I think somebody is UPSET!! Lol lol
Read the article again and you shall know how those who are against the US War on Terror (you) are called.
You made my day!!
Thank You Mona
“Steb, you FUCKWITTED GOOSE, …..and I also will not be diverted, which is frequently the hope of those who traffic mostly in NAME-CALLING” Mona
“No, I almost always ignore that BULLSHIT and drill home on the substance my opponents try to pass off as fact or logic.” Mona
You have lost your imagination due to the amount of time you spend clapping for Mr Greenwald. I hope you can at least notice that you just refer to your own arguments as BS.
“……But even if they had, I don’t whine about it when others call me names…..”
Are there two Monas that post at the Intercept and the Guardian? You have whined the last two years over being placed at the extreme left wing end of the political spectrum. No one has even come close to objecting to that label as much as you.
Actually, no. I have repeatedly pointed out that you label almost all anti-Zionists as “far left” or some version of that, and observed this is a hasbara ploy also popular in Israel. Only there, it is actually becoming dangerous for the people identified as ‘far left,” who have been beaten and threatened.
What you do, Craig, is not “name-calling.” It is part of the hasbara incitement campaign against those who speak truth about Zionism.
Um, no. For I am not one who “traffics mostly in name calling.” It’s pretty much reserved only for Zio-fascists like you and Craig.
Indeed, Craig (and Zionists all over) would be very happy if I was mostly about name-calling. Sadly for his Zionist heart, I post great amounts of documentation of the crimes and atrocities of Zionists and Israel.
Still upset? Get over it Mona. Read another Mr Greenwald’s article. That might make you feel better.
“……Sadly for his Zionist heart, I post great amounts of documentation of the crimes and atrocities of Zionists and Israel…..”
Right Mona. I notice that you have skipped mentioning the recent terrorist attack in a Jerusalem synagogue. You will find some reason to justify the murder of Jews in this incident which was once again applauded by Hamas. Three of the victims were dual Israel-US citizens which of course did not warrant an article in the Intercept. The Intercept is in the propaganda business picturing dead Palestinian children while ignoring Jewish infants.
Thanks Mona
The Jewish Zionists of Israel are an ongoing, vile oppressor. The ANC killed innocents, too. Sometimes horrifically.
The ANC’s cause was just, and so is that of the Palestinians.
Mona is correct. I do not mean Mr Greenwald is a Zionist. Happy Thanksgiving.
eh?
Zionism is Israeli nationalism.If it concerned itself with its interests without interfering in American policy and interests,I’d have absolutely no concern about it,as its policies would then be subject to normal international and internal dynamics,and would obviously mellow its bellicosity and hatred expressed to the people they have dispossessed(a very weird human phenomena),as then they will have to get along with neighbors and Arabs,or be eliminated.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/27/technology/personaltech/as-drones-swoop-above-skies-thrill-seeking-stunts-elicit-safety-concerns.html?_r=0
Today the world is facing a big threat from the private drones equipped with GPS and bombs. No target in the world is safe if the terrorists get a 100 of these drones, program them to reach for some coordinates simultaneously and then explode their bombs. It will be impossible for any law enforcement to stop this attack. All secret agencies must immediately track all sale of drones. Meanwhile, we should supply these small drones to the Kurds to finish off the ISIS. GPS satellites must also deactivate all directions to security spots so that drones cannot be programmed to reach those spots.
Let’s back off a ways and try to hold on to sanity. There is a weapon that has been readily available in the US for decades that would allow any low tech trained small group of terrorists to kill hundreds of people every week in US urban areas. It is called a semi automatic machine pistol. And even if it were not available, the next gun lower in killing potential would do fine. Simply stand on a street corner in rush hour and blast away. Yet this does not happen. Why not? What does this say about the actual goals of “terrorists”?
You are talking about unprotected entities, whereas I am referring to protected entities that could easily become vulnerable.
We have to provide full “authority” to the “Authorities” to do their job. Otherwise they will fail and render us vulnerable. Then all this freedom and privacy will be meaningless. This is the Bush-Obama logic that we have inherited, right or wrong. The next in line is another Clinton or Bush, and she or he will drag on this logic further. People like you are in the minority, Mr Sulzer, thankfully, and more so now that we can let all the illegals stay. ;-) Our first priority is safety, whether you and Greenwald agree or not.
“FEAR”… The most prominent and effective of the “Three Trojan Horses” Fear, Food and Sex… You should read “Virus of the Mind” by Richard Brodie, the creator of “Microsoft Word”… A fascinating look at the world of memes and the fidelity they posses to influence collective behavior. The manipulation of public opinion is an easy task, especially with the modern media communication platforms that we have developed. Having said that, I’m with the camp that believes that having taken this path, we can not turn the hands of time back and that the neo-liberal vision of a “new world order”, is not only inevitable but a certainty. I have no illusions about this matter. Although I admire the courage and integrity of James Risen, Glenn Greenwald, Edward Snowden et al, they are fighting a futile battle and perhaps, it can be said, that those are the only battles worth fighting. Me…? I’m too old for this shit… Good luck…!
“…that a new president who doesn’t really have a great deal of experience with the military or the intelligence community has these impressive generals and CIA people coming in with medals on their chest and decades of experience and as you say, purposefully scaring them…”
Part of the answer may be that the President fell on his own oratory sword when he said, paraphrasing, that Washington was a place where ideas come to die. Today, it is probably true that some of the ideas he had before taking residence in the White House, lie deeply interred somewhere on the grounds of that great place.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ wp-dyn/content/article/2008/02/19/AR20008021903257.html
But a major part of the answer most probably lies in how a president of any nation who is buoyed to power by waves of popular ideas that largely represent the aspirations of his/her people, and which often invariably run in conflict with corporate and military interests. After election, he gets a sobering visit from the real power behind the facade.
For a small taste of how that works, you may want to watch this youtube video and find out the fate of one Ecuadorian lawyer turned popularly elected president when he insisted on serving the interests of his people…
http://www.youtube.com/watch?=aqlHKWd9rSc
How do they bring up the War on Terror and not address the events (911/anthrax attacks) that continue to serve as pretext for the entire thing, And the host of problems with the official accounts of what occurred during the 9/11-anthrax attacks. That should be their starting point! Not that there was no Islamist ‘planes operation’ -I have no idea. Only that even a cursory look at the facts (starting with the fema bpat appendix C) overwhelmingly proves the demolition of WTC 1 2 & 7 on 9/11, -and nothing but explosives can satisfactorily explain observed & recorded events and the subsequent forensic findings show that both attacks could only have originated from US military insiders. http://smu.gs/19q1JlM
Not to beat a dead horse, but if historians indeed are going to wonder about Obama’s lost opportunity in 2008/9 I think it is worth considering the rather weird circumstances in which he was propelled to the stagefront from nowhere, within an few years, a carefull orchestrated media play to say the least. I think those who propelled him there had both the power to float him high as well as the means to bring him down. The matters of his citizenship and his college records, however farfetched they probably are, would suffice to make him stumble, but they are always covered in silence just in time. These types of ‘knowledge’ are perfect to control a puppet.
Excellent interview Glenn–how’d it feel to ask the questions? (and not be attacked)
Wish you and James Risen would talk once a month…be great if you did an interview once a week though with some other guests!!!
“Excellent interview Glenn–how’d it feel to ask the questions? (and not be attacked)
Wish you and James Risen would talk once a month…be great if you did an interview once a week though with some other guests!!!”
Excellent comment, Systemic Fraud. Anyone besides me think it stunning that Risen said the real reason for such widespread support for GWOT and all its affiliated enterprises is the prospect of long-term lucrative jobs for politicians, generals, and their minions?
“Anyone besides me think it stunning that Risen said the real reason for such widespread support for GWOT and all its affiliated enterprises is the prospect of long-term lucrative jobs for politicians, generals, and their minions?”
Me!
It’s hard to conceive there are “people”(I’m using that term loosely) walking around with so little compassion in their soul that they could perpetuate something so utterly ugly and unredeeming as WAR. Unless these people hide in their houses they’re out on the street amongst us. What a creepy thought. Ewwwww. Speak up people. Ewww again.
For decades now, any ideas about compassion or the commonweal have been savagely excised from political discourse. See, for example, how Dems have run away from the word “liberal” because it was deliberately made to have “bad” connotations. In fact, Hillary made a point in the primary of relabeling herself a “progressive,” by which she wanted to be recognized as a neoliberal. But this is just one very obvious example. In many other ways the discourse has been redacted and narrowed, and our media actors have been very careful to normalize this trend.
Henry Giroux talks about the dominant neoliberal ethos:
“As an ideology, it construes profit making as the essence of democracy, consuming as the only operable form of citizenship, and upholds the irrational belief that the market cannot only solve all problems but serve as a model for structuring all social relations. It is steeped in the language of self-help, individual responsibility and is purposely blind to inequalities in power, wealth and income and how they bear down on the fate of individuals and groups. As such, it supports a theater of cruelty that is scornful of any notion of compassion and concern for others. As a mode of governance, it produces identities, subjects, and ways of life driven by a survival of the fittest ethic, grounded in the idea of the free, possessive individual, and committed to the right of ruling groups and institutions to accrue wealth removed from matters of ethics and social costs.”
http://truth-out.org/opinion/item/23156-henry-a-giroux-neoliberalism-democracy-and-the-university-as-a-public-sphere
Interesting PI.
Sounds like a ‘faith-based initiative.’
At least journalists can console themselves in the knowledge that they are no less disrespected by Obama than aid workers trying to eradicate the deadly disease, Polio:
“Attackers kill 4 polio workers in Pakistan
Militants have targeted anti-polio campaigns in Pakistan since U.S. intelligence officials used a vaccination program to help in their hunt for Osama bin Laden in 2011. Under cover of the program, the CIA sought to collect DNA samples from relatives of the al Qaeda leader to verify his presence in a compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan.”
http://www.cnn.com/2014/11/26/world/asia/pakistan-violence/
Being someone who contracted polio in 1953 at the age of 1, this despicable CIA program holds a special place in my heart. This was a program carried out by an official agency of ours. Using our tax dollars and not one person has had to pay for this crime except the victims of polio and the aid workers who were killed in response to the CIA’s thoughtfully executed plan. I’ve lived with the effects of polio for over sixty years. Anyone want to know if I trust my government? I have to stop commenting as my head feels like it’s going to explode.
Except for the probability that Osama bin Laden had already died in 2001:
http://www.infowars.com/top-us-government-insider-bin-laden-died-in-2001-911-a-false-flag/
There have been many sources detailing the fact that Osama bin Laden suffered from some type of kidney disease that required dialysis (which cannot be done in a cave in Tora Bora) and that he did die in 2001. Pakistani newspapers covered his death and his funeral.
If Osama bin Laden did die in 2001, then “what” did the Obama administration do in Abbottabad, May 2, 2011?
And wasn’t it curious how so many of the Seals who were involved in the “assassination” of OBL were killed soon thereafter in a crash in Afghanistan?:
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/05/10/families-fallen-navy-seals-in-2011-attack-say-government-is-to-blame/
As Alice in Wonderland said, “Things just keep getting curiouser and curiouser.”
Since we are on the subject of democracy, really, I think maybe America should take a page out of Israel’s play book and declare America a white democracy. Problem solved. As Netanyahu would say, reaffirming that America’s character is white doesn’t take away any rights from blacks it only bolsters America’s “national right” to be white.
“The schizophrenic self-presentation of the State of Israel as Jewish and democratic is coming to an end in a clear choice of the polity’s Jewish and non-democratic fibre. But exactly what does a “Jewish nation-state” mean?
The ideologues of the regime are quick to point out that there is no inherent tension between France being a French and democratic state, or Germany being a German and democratic country. But neither Frenchness nor Germanness is equivalent to Jewishness. Even if the majority of citizens in France and Germany are Christian, these states are not declared to be “Christian nation-states”.”
http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2014/11/what-jewish-nation-state-bill-l-201411247654203281.html
I ‘m not sure I understand what you’re saying. Are you saying that because Israel is now officially a “Jewish State,” that means it’s not a democracy? What? The Jews can’t have a safe home land? Israel can’t be a “Jewish State” and a democracy at the same time? WHY NOT? I don’t understand. WTF is your problem?
It’s good to see the word “radicalized” in a sentence not also containing the words “young Muslim men”.
Deepa Kumar, in her book “Islamophobia and the Politics of Empire” destroys the warmongers’ pseudoscientific theories of risk assessment and radicalization, bullshit theories that are promoted to justify atrocities against our brothers and sisters who are Muslim.
Btw, worthwhile:
Southern Horrors and Other Writings
http://www.macmillanhighered.com/Catalog/product/southernhorrorsandotherwritings-firstedition-royster
I was just reading one of Obama’s pretty speeches, his recent comments on the Ferguson violence, he says things, beautiful things such as “we are a nation built on the rule of law.”
On that “law” thing, I’m compiling a list, so far I’ve got:
massive Wall St fraud
kidnapping and torture of “terror” suspects
assassination of citizens and non-citizens alike
Did I mention the wars???
It’s not a complete list and I guess Obama/Clinton is going to be adding to it as fast as we can write it down so we’ll have to come back to it. In the meantime Ferguson offers us an opportunity to revisit the part Obama has played in the lead up to current day militarized law enforcement and race relations.
Heir to the giants of the civil rights movement, Obama has made herculean efforts to avoid entering the racial debate. And even when circumstances demand that the US president say something on the topic of bigotry, racism and the aftermath of slavery, Obama offers only the platitudes required, and no more.
“”The arc of the moral universe may bend towards justice, but it doesn’t bend on its own,” he said, quoting Martin Luther King, a half century after the March on Washington last year.
But Obama has studiously avoided the debate over whether race is a factor in his sinking approval ratings. He also shies away from talking about whether race played a role in his party’s struggles in the South this election season, as Louisiana Sen. Mary Landrieu, a Democrat, suggested during an interview about her own prospects for re-election this fall.”
http://www.cnn.com/2014/11/25/politics/obama-race-ferguson/
Imagine, somewhere in America, a young African-American boy, maybe even in a place like Ferguson is watching Obama and thinking “hey, I could be a Wall St backed status quo politician who quotes MLK”!!!
quote”I was just reading one of Obama’s pretty speeches, his recent comments on the Ferguson violence, he says things, beautiful things such as “we are a nation built on the rule of law.”unquote
Rule of Law.
BWHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA…HOHOHOHOHOHOHOHOHOH….HEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHE…HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!
rule of law. goddamn. thanks for the laugh. I almost forgot about that myth.
http://rsjexperiment.wordpress.com/2011/12/29/the-myth-of-the-rule-of-law/#more-316
Of course, if anyone, Robert McCulloch, the prosecutor who just defended that scumbag murderer cop in Ferguson, just proved it.
Perhaps it is worse. Could we now be living in the era of “Continuity of Government” since 9/11 where they, for all intents and purposes, “suspended” the Constitution?:
http://www.globalresearch.ca/the-911-plan-cheney-rumsfeld-and-the-continuity-of-government/5320879
Dear Mr. Risen. Speaking for myself and for my deceased dad, PATRICK ANDREW FITZPATRICK, I want to thank you from the bottom of my heart. You are the carrier of every value my dad and a million others like him, fought in WW11. If it weren’t for the PBY crew he served with that discovered the Japanese fleet heading for Midway..your contribution to the preservation of those same values may have been moot. Thankfully, it is not. I’m absolutely positive, like those crew members, there have been moments in your journey that you might have wondered why it is worth the risk to stand fast in the face of the most insidious perversion of those values, History will prove why. Here is the living proof. …
http://pbymf.org/nl/images/2007-05-a.jpg
Again..I thank you from the bottom of my heart for risking your future to refute that which is poisening those values today. You deserve the Medal of Honor. As to Pay Any Price.. those scum in our government whom now pervert and mock the sacrifices of those who actually preserved our nation..don’t have a clue what that price is. But they will.
I don’t think race is much of a factor in Obama’s sinking popularity. The racists hated him from the start. The big factor in the CHANGE is his performance – which is driving even blacks away from him. He’s been at best almost useless, and in many respects – which Risen discusses – truly evil. For most people, the economy has gotten worse under is stewardship, because he’s so completely Wall St.’s poodle. That’s more than enough to drive down someone’s popularity. It took Romney as an opponent to enable his re-election, and that’s saying a lot. (Footnote: the latest poll shows Romney defeating Hillary. Now, that’s a shocker, and a good reason for her not to run.)
By the way, I’d like everyone to know that I’ve been busy lately, but I’ve got time now to catch up on the news and comment on some past articles:
CBS News October 21, 2011 – “After nearly 9 years, America’s war in Iraq will be over,” said Mr. Obama.
He said the last American troops will depart the country by January 1 “with their heads held high, proud of their success, and knowing that the American people stand united in our support for our troops.”
“The transition in Afghanistan is moving forward, and our troops are finally coming home,” he added, saying in the White House briefing room that U.S. troops “will definitely be home for the holidays.”
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/obama-announces-end-of-iraq-war-troops-to-return-home-by-year-end/
… so to give credit where credit is due, for once I’d like to tip the hat to Obama, after announcing the end of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars so many times I’ve lost count, he is finally making good and bringing the troops home!!!
quote”By the way, I’d like everyone to know that I’ve been busy lately,”unquote
Says one who thinks the world wide readers of this comment section has a clue to who you f are or gives a fuck. Meanwhile, get a grip on your importance.
Actually, longterm readers in Greenwald comment sections do know JLocke. In fact, when he first resumed commenting a few days ago, I mentioned taht it was good to see him again.
Happy Thanksgiving chronicle. :-)
The comment section is hard to read.
1.non-bold, different type-size, different font from article
2.almost total lack of formatting, like notepad before formatting
John Cook, who came from Gawker, which has great formatting,
did not address this.Look at Disqus–it’s the right size, bold, correct
formatting—instantly.
Not enough money?
It doesn’t help that the comments font is sans-serif (that is, no thingies on the tips of the letters to help distinguish them). Won’t cost anything to go to Times New Roman at least, and maybe one type-size larger.
Coram,
You are back!! Good to see you again.
As long as we are making suggestions on how to make the comments section better, howz about creating the feature where when one hits on a link then wants to go back to the comments it returns to where you were?
Thanks!
Just open the link in a new tab
PLEASE no Discus. I can deal with the present comment structure, but Discus is too busy tracking us.
I kind of like Discus!
That way I can make my comments, go to bed and get up to my inbox filled with comments, might reply to some, delete most….makes the day a bit more…. interesting.
I concur with feline about Discus for whatever that’s worth.
Happy Thanksgiving to Intercept readers, who give me hope.
Thank you for adding the transcript as I can read much better than I can hear. I trust you will continue to do so in the future for we hearing challenged.
I would be remiss if I didn’t express gratitude to both GG and Risen for the work they’ve done thus far. Yet there is much, much more to be done. And when I reached out to Risen recently to ask him to investigate electronic harassment, he summarily dismissed me as a crackpot and advised I see a doctor. Yet just this week NSA whistleblower William Binney attended the first Covert Harassment Conference in Brussels. I was disappointed that man being targeted by the White House could be so dismissive that there are weapons being used against the public for which he has no knowledge. He certainly did not show the openmindedness exhibited by Sharon Weinberger in her ‘Mind Games’ piece. The law allows intelligence agencies to experiment on the public. I can tell you that they are indeed doing so. . http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/50/1805.html Please, open your minds. There is much more work to be done.
Risen worked as a reporter on the CIA beat 2003/2004, he could just ask his sources if these weapons exist. The weapons were developed by the CIA from work done the Nazis and Soviets, then allegedly a rogue agent sold the technology. They claim they are not the ones using the technology against American citizens. I think this is probably the case. It’s still unclear who exactly is running the program. Risen is already facing prison for his NSA reporting. I think the subject of non-consensual human weapons testing and Stasi-like harassment groups is just too much to process. You are basically saying the world you think you live in…is an illusion. Everything from human rights, law enforcement, the judicial system is just window dressing. People are not ready to accept that and if the harassment and torture has not happened to them personally, it’s very difficult to believe. Nobody believed there were gulags and very few people believed there were concentration camps (both operated in secrecy), until there was irrefutable proof.
Risen is an excellent reporter, but to take that next step that the Defense Department contractors might be running illicit weapons testing programs and/or a for hire psyops program against innocents is asking a lot from a current NYT reporter. Frankly, the New York Times could just point a camera out of their numerous windows at Port Authority and watch the stalkers in action ALL day long, every day. Film/Watch their hand signals, see them harass targets, change uniforms…but they don’t.
BTW, I saw a number of doctors. I have letters from both a psychologist and a neurologist that is board certified in psychiatry, stating that I show no signs of mental illness. I have before and after MRIs of my brain, one clean, one with lesions all over the brain (after the DEW weapons attacks started). I also have pictures of the numerous chips/clips inserted into my breasts during biopsies, one was a two inch curved wire long with frayed antennas. I have an advanced pathology report of pre-cancerous cell changes surrounding the clips. No doctor has ever seen the 2 inch clip, or the cell changes before. There is no explanation for the lesions all over my brain. They did every test possible.
Doctors are not the way to address the problem of crimes against humanity, especially when doctors in the U.S. are often complicit. However a Swat team raid on the perps might do…and some life in prison sentence for multiple felonies. But that would mean enforcing the law, against people who are above the law.
I am sorry AmericanGestapo and understand completely.
It’s frustrating witnessing the selfcongratulatory tone among the establishment journalists who seem indifferent to these reports of EH. I am certain that the USG, Northrop Grumman and intelligence agencies are behind my targeting. I’ve repeatedly have invited GG to bring a countermeasures expert to my condo because the evidence is here in the walls; that offer extends to James Risen or any other reporter willing to bring a countermeasures team. Until then, wish me luck surviving.
My condolences AG. I have repeatedly invited GG to bring a countermeasures team
to my home as the evidence is here in the walls. That offer extends to Risen or any other reporter who is interested in revealing the new covert ‘zersetzen’ being used against ordinary citizens. The indifference of these national intelligence reporters causes deep anguish. This ‘touchless torture’ is being directed in my case by US Intelligence, Northrop Grumman and a government contractor hired through a company called Huron Consulting from a FannieMae foreclosed apartment adjacent to mine. To those of you here who pray I ask that you keep targets in your prayers.
All they need is one whisteblower to disclose this program and the house comes down. I don’t think it can be kept quiet too much longer. There are way too many targets and huge number of participants. A target’s neighbors are shockingly easy to recruit. Eventually someone with a conscience will talk. The state AGs, law enforcement and congress are being bombarded with complaints.
Another point I’d like to make is that Gary Webb’s life and career were destroyed, because he didn’t have a source inside the CIA to confirm his story. No journalist wants to make that mistake again. Greenwald was able to write these articles, because Snowden dumped the proof in his lap. Although journalists may have heard rumors of these programs and allegations of their abuse, there was no hard proof. I’m sure Greenwald and Poitras were floored when they actually reviewed the full scale of the secret surveillance programs. Some of the individual programs were so bizarre, people would have said you were crazy if you claimed the US government was engaged in these actions.
Journalist need a source from inside,with documentation to confirm the use of experimental weapons against the public. And the big problem is that even I have been unable to figure out which group is running this operation. Recently, a guy and his partner were harassing me at the Supermarket. He loudly claimed he worked for the NSA and then later assaulted me beneath a video camera. I can assure you that this idiot, did not work for the NSA. The truth is, he probably has no idea who he actually works for…
AmericanGestapo, the corruption is deep and includes water and sewer departments, utilities, police, FBI, DHS, no doubt the fusion centers, NSA and CIA. In my case, the reason is political vendetta but they took years to lay the tracks. A woman who clearly is some sort of intelligence agent with corporate cover from Thompson Reuters is involved, along with her electrical engineer husband with Northrop Grumman. But there are also agents from a company called Pathstone as well as Huron. And yes it has been amazing to witness how easily it’s been for them to buy neighbors to become complicit. I had no idea that people could so easily be bought for new windows or a kitchen. Many of the people involved are young, and you must admit the best career opportunities during last decade have been within the police state. But it’s crazy when you see someone raising their child with lies. By the way, my initiation into this harassment began with being targeted with a weapon that created the microwave auditory effect. Several months before, the city’s sewer and water had worked for months directly in front of my home. And when they started project, they pulled directly in front if my condo. The lawn was brown all summer. I immediately realized that something was afoot, and at the same time noticed a very deep hole on the lawn exactly in line wirh where I sleep in bed. Despite months of street work, there was a break in the curb that also aligned with the hole and where I sleep. I began to run the hose down the hole for hours at a time. Eventually, the auditory effect stopped, and shortly later in the middle of the night I was awakened by two muffled booms which shook the ground. Interestingly, the auditory effect seemed to happen on a Sun-Thurs schedule, almost like someone took the weekend off between harassment.
AG, I have taken to wearing a heavy leather hat with window mesh lining the interior so I don’t wake up dizzy and with poor balance. It seems to help.
Myron May was a victim and I feel so bad for him. When you tell people what’s happening they immediately think you have lost your mind.?They try to destroy your family, your finances, your health with the goal of making you commit suicide. This is known about by many — even a cop I approached to ask about DEWs finished my sentence for me when I said ‘they’ had stopped using them but were now using — his word utttered insync with mine — ‘satelllite.’
I pray and ask all of you here who also might pray for this diabolical evil to be revealed soon. If anyone had questions, I’d be hapoy to answer them. And yes I too have seen mental health and internists and have not been diagnosed as delusional or schizophrenic. But these assaults only happen when I’m alone, confirming 24/7 surveillance. And I have identified 11 coax cables running from the ‘foreclosed unit’ next door being rented to a very short contractor. The unit was sold just this past Monday to FannieMae who began the foreclosure procedure but then placed a ‘hold’ on it until I manage to post online information about unit this past summer.
I have posted previously the link that details how intelligence agencies are allowed to perform experiments. If anyone needs that again, please let me know and I will post again. But all here should know that Congress is complicit and needs to be challenged enmasse fir this evil.
Let’ just say, I’ve told a lot of people what’s going on in various branches of the U.S. and foreign government (law enforcement, judiciary etc…). Let’s just say, (the stalkers/psyops teams) they’re completely fucked. I hung out with NYT reporters, 5-7 years ago, before I was a target. One of them worked on my last film. But I’m sure the New York Times already knows that particular fact…
If you believe in the national security state in the way Obama does, then you have to also believe in squashing dissent.
That may be the key point in this interview. In “the war on terror” the lines between policing crime and conducting war have been…obliterated. America and its allies may not be in a “total war” in the sense that they are throwing every bomb they have at the enemy, but it is total war in the sense that “all’s fair” (in love and war). Not only is there no tactic that is out of bounds legally, but the definition of “the enemy” is also boundless, it’s not only fighters with arms, on the ground somewhere, or even their non-combatant supporters, the enemy is also, anyone who is opposed to even the concept of total war itself. Obama’s enemy is anyone who’s criticism serves to hamper the government’s freedom to conduct total war. And that way of defining the enemy obviously is going to corral many, many of their own citizens, among them journalists.
Swish … he cannot be stopped.
I remember thinking after the Bush cabal declared war on Osama bin Laden … who, what, where? *I think they declared war on OBL’s horse too, but they’ve got him pulling a plow down in Gitmo.
Follow the horned toad…
Looks like Jeh Johnson might be the next Secretary of Defense:
http://www.blackagendareport.com/content/who-jeh-johnson-and-why-should-black-people-be-hanging-our-heads-shame
In the larger picture this is about the inability of the U.S. and its allies to come to terms with the post-Cold War world – we had a ten-year window of opportunity to end the Cold War and restructure our economy – military spending is non-productive, a tank just sits there – a factory, in contrast, produces goods. (Ask China how this works.) At the end of the Cold War, a huge chunk of the U.S. economy revolved around the military complex, which in turn played a central role in assuring U.S. control over Middle Eastern oil imports and global oil shipping routes.
At the end of the Cold War, we could have closed overseas military bases and withdrawn from global empire dreams – but no, Clinton and Bush kept the overseas military bases open while closing domestic ones. The domestic military bases were a boon to local state economies; the overseas military ones were for the protection of the global empire and Wall Street investment funds (such as the ones where the Saudi Royals place their oil money, in the form of US dollars). U.S. military spending should have dropped down to 20% of Cold War era expenditures – then we’d be on a par with what China and Russia spend on their military.
It’s always worth remembering what Colin Powell said around 1995: “I’m running out of enemies” – i.e. we need more justification to keep these bloated military budgets intact, now that there is no Soviet threat. Enter the war on terror and the U.S. military invasion of Iraq, (note the much smaller and initially short-lived U.S. military invasion of Afghanistan, and no invasion and occupation of Saudi Arabia at all, even though that’s where the hijackers and the money for the hijackers came from), and as a result, the ascendancy of Iran in the region (the real winners in the Iraq debacle). The new terror threat, ISIS and ISIL are most likely Saudi-financed proxy groups aimed at countering Iran above all else.
Public awareness of this situation and demand for a post Cold War peace dividend are growing – but the only way is large budget cuts to military spending. A 50% reduction in the NSA black budget would be appropriate, for example. At the same time, put in new rules banning federal employees and politicians from working for recipients of federal contracts for say, five years after leaving government.
Of course, with all this growing public awareness of the situation, there is a growing need to implement an authoritarian government to stifle dissent and keep people cowed and obedient to the dictates of Washington. . . Brezhnev would understand, that’s who the apparatchiks and functionaries who sustain the current state of affairs model themselves on, isn’t it? The neocons were a perfect example of that mentality – and yes, the British and American executive leadership has always been envious of the kind of state control of the population and the media found in China, Saudi Arabia and elsewhere – they’d implement that if they could, in a second.
“a post Cold War peace dividend”
I haven’t heard mention of the “peace dividend” in some time. This article from 1993 sheds some light. According to Andrew Marshall, the more peaceful post cold war world was a difficult transition for Europe, and America didn’t even attempt to make the transition (except rhetorically):
“As the United States and the Soviet Union sign a historic accord that brings an era of military competition to an end, a price is being paid. Defence cuts and reductions in military forces have brought in their wake a series of job losses.
The transitional costs of the end of the Cold War, combined with the inadequacy of government responses across Western Europe, have meant that we are worse, not better, off. Defence cuts are taking place in an unplanned flurry, with little co-ordination between state and industry or among governments.
…But the most significant comparison is with the US. American exports, in contrast to those from Europe, have remained stable at about dollars 12bn. The US has plainly decided it will fight to maintain the world arms market.”
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/what-happened-to-the-peace-dividend-the-end-of-the-cold-war-cost-thousands-of-jobs-andrew-marshall-looks-at-how-the-world-squandered-an-opportunity-1476221.html
Thanks for the great article.
Thanks for a great interview and again another incredible act of moral courage.
Regarding crimes against acts of civil courage ,there are two different types of tyranny and according to my opinion differences between the two are as following ;
Eastern style dictatorship: lack of freedom of speech
Vicious and mortal punishment of disobedience
Authorities are directly involved in the deadly violence against target individuals
Obedience is not an option but an untouchable rule
Western style dictatorship: Freedom of speech to a certain point but inhuman personal restrictions afterwards in case of whistleblowing
Psychological , economical and social punishments with mortal outcomes like suicide
Authorities escape responsibility for the deadly outcome (pulling the trigger) but put the blame on the character of the target individuals
Silence is a negotiable well paid economical deal for people in key positions
Give it (the ghost) up, boys.
ME: As to motive ~ how does one ever know these things?
GLEEN/RISEN (IN HARMONY): You mean we’re right!
*
Where “normalized” = covered up And “emergency, ad-hoc basis” = a pack of lies.
*note to self: file this discussion under stuff you don’t see on Meet The Press or read in The New York Times.
I’m assuming you know that Risen works for the NYT? I wouldn’t be surprised if you did not.
Don’t be silly Nate. This article devotes considerable ink to Risen’s employment w/ the NYT …
*Have you even read the article? … I wouldn’t be surprised if you have not./
Read the interview and read Risen’s book last month.
You still haven’t answered why this discussion is something you wouldn’t read in the NYT, considering that much of the book’s content is derived or includes stories from Risen’s NYT work. I know taking jabs at the NYT is fun and all, but the logic behind it just doesn’t make sense considering his employer.
You still haven’t answered why this discussion is something you wouldn’t read in the NYT, considering that much of the book’s content is derived or includes stories from Risen’s NYT work. I know taking jabs at the NYT is fun and all, but the logic behind it just doesn’t make sense considering his employer.
Makes perfect sense if you consider this:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/12/16/AR2005121601716.html
If Risen hadn’t been about to scoop them with his book it appears they might not have published at all. Risen forced their hand. After they obstructed publishing of the story for a year and past the 2004 presidential election.
HOW MANY JOURNALISTS HAVE LOST THEIR RESPECT BECAUSE THEY WERE UNWILLING TO REPORT THE TRUTH?
“I (James Risen) remember she told me, “I won’t RESPECT you if you don’t do that.”
Thank you Mrs Risen for standing up for human DIGNITY, respect and individual integrity.
I hope and PRAY that many other real journalists will be ashamed of not doing more and DO MORE.
Americans hope that they will be inspired and that they will find the COURAGE to stand up to the corporate Status Quo.
That our “reporters” will provide us with that essential information the American public need so DESPERATELY.
If we don’t know the facts, have the critical information, and are provided with honest analysis we are DOOMED as a free people.
THANKS AGAIN MRS. RISEN.
Thank you Glenn for this interview.
I really didn’t know as much about Mr. Risen as i should and i’ll start correcting this flaw by buying his book.
Delightful read. Connecting dots. Thinking historically.
The National Security State is the emporer. it’s been exposed down to a lot of dirty underwear. But so far, in the Anglo nations (the “five eyes,” USA, UK, Canada, Australia and NZ), the push is to give security agencies even MORE powers. These right wing goverments just don’t get it.
Your wonderfully candid conversation has made my week, gentlemen, and I thank you both!
Perhaps though you won’t be too surprised any longer learning John Ashcroft in fact knew he was already full of shit when he claimed, “Privacy is actually a crucial value,” in the 1990’s.
Someone in your combined author-journalist profession should probably investigate just how many times defense surveillance/reconnaissance satellite photos have been used in USA stateside criminal prosecutions, and I’m just guessing – to always win decisions. Because I remember specifically reading in the press about at least 2 such cases from exactly that era. I believe the first was in a Springfield, MO newspaper and involved a 1994/95 Joplin area murder trial – where military satellite photos were somehow made available to local prosecutors to disprove the husband’s alibi he was out of town at the time of his wife’s death. Just a couple years later I remember reading (again, I believe) an internet AP piece about farmers in a southern state (LA?) being convicted of claiming federal fallow field subsidies while instead planting and harvesting those fields. And again, Department of Defense satellite photos received credit as the damning evidence.
There’s another surveillance story that’s never discussed or given the time of day – by anyone, other than some impressive nighttime photos of buildings, and it really should be…
A happy SnowMann Day of thanks to you this Friday, Mr. Greenwald.
Excellent!
Your compass is working perfectly with the performance and publication of this interview Mr. Greenwald.
In fact…I would say that you don’t need to rely on magnetic settings with this material.
Your heading is for True North.
Perfect.
If you are reading these comments Mr. Risen; you probably have more fans than you know about.
May both of you keep on exposing and reporting the truth.
Many thanks to the Whistleblowers.
They’re trivial but they’re conditional on proper behavior. Think of it like training a dog – you provide only small treat after each trick performed. If you rewarded a dog with a large meal, he’d lose interest and find a place to go lie down and sleep. By keeping each reward small, you maintain the politician’s full attention and eagerness to perform and be rewarded for the next trick.
Your more general point on DC underselling its services is a good one, however. Washington is a tremendous bargain, to such an extent that it almost represents a market failure. This is because traditionally a relatively small group of lobbyists had access to politicians. They could therefore offer smaller incentives, knowing that others who could offer more might not have the right access. How many companies, with cash in their pockets, have been left wondering how to spend it to get the right legislative results? There are many people willing to take the money, but most of them can’t actually deliver. This uncertainty drives down prices.
Fortunately, technology provides a solution. Legislative votes could be auctioned on an EBay type site. The market would reward this openness and transparency. All that’s needed is a vote to set up the legal framework of this system, and then the politicians could sit back and watch the money roll in.
All good points, Duce, especially the idea that incremental rewards may work better than large ones. You also have a good point about canine psychology, although let me point out that if you feed a dog, he won’t turn around and bite you, or run off with the next man with hamburgers. That is the difference between a dog and a legislator.
Still, the idea of an E-Bay for influence is a good market-driven solution. In this Dickensian economy, we might as well have street vendors as well on K St.
“…let me point out that if you feed a dog, he won’t turn around and bite you, or run off with the next man with hamburgers. That is the difference between a dog and a legislator.”
I need to brush up my embroidery skills, and start making samplers.
There’s also the fact that it’s not possible to paper train politicians who prefer to shit all over everything in their – and the rest of the world’s – environment.
ROTFL!
Thanks for the laugh, Pedinska (and it is also so true!).
A dog and a legislator are OK subjects for embroidery. Shit and paper training are not. Just sayin…;-)
I think you have puppies on the brain.
As W.C. Fields observed, “I have to see a man about a dog.”
Lawrence Lessig made a similar remark in his book “Republic Lost” regarding how Congress prefers to pass laws, like tax breaks for the rich, that span only a year or two. That way they can keep the money rolling in by keeping the “fight” on going.
Thank you Glenn and The Intercept for this posting. Courage in all the participants is a virtue that came through,to me at least, in away that is infectious and encourages me to keep on keeping on. Book reading has never been a particular interest of mine until the absurdities of the direction our country has taken finally caught up with my sleeping conscience. People such as James Risen and Glenn Greenwald and the cast here at The Intercept are carrying the torch of truth and freedom. I don’t normally get all gushy(is that a word?), but this nation is at a crossroad that needs, no, requires fearless and adversarial journalists to hopefully steer us toward the correct path. Both Glenn’s and James’ books are on my list of books to buy(everybody needs money). As I type this, Braveheart is playing on the tube with Mel’s guts being displayed and it surely brings into focus the quest for freedom and the struggle to keep it. While our struggle might not seem as gruesome as that, just ask the recipients of our “tortured some folks” that are still alive if they would agree. What kind of monsters does endless war create? I include myself in that if I remain silent. Speak up, people.
Awesome interview–highly suggest everyone downloads it to listen to while stuck in holiday traffic.
It certainly seems there is very little oversight of the defense & intelligence sectors–I came across this paper “The Roots of Weak Congressional Intelligence Oversight” by Amy B. Zegart over the weekend:
Another senior intelligence official noted that oversight had deteriorated so much during his career that “I don’t even know what good oversight looks like anymore.”[12] Overseers agreed. One legislator who served on a congressional intelligence committee called oversight “horrible” and said that improving even the intelligence budget process would mean that “somebody in Congress would have to die.”
These qualitative impressions are supported by two quantitative metrics most frequently used to evaluate oversight: hearing and legislative productivity. Tracking hearings held by fifteen House and Senate committees in 1985, 1990, 1995, 2000, and 2005, I found that the intelligence committees ranked at the bottom every year except one. In 2005, the House Intelligence Committee held just 23 hearings (both classified and unclassified), compared to 77 hearings in the Energy and Commerce Committee, 91 in the Oversight and Government Reform Committee, and 104 hearings held by the Foreign Affairs Committee. Intelligence committees also trailed behind others in producing legislation. In a comparison of legislative productivity among four major Senate policy committees, intelligence again ranked last. Between 1985 and 2005, the Senate Intelligence Committee considered an average of just six bills per year. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee considered an average of 118 bills per year, the Senate Banking Committee considered 161 bills, and the Senate Commerce Committee considered an average of 241 bills each year.
http://www.hoover.org/sites/default/files/research/docs/futurechallenges_zegart.pdf
Productivity in congress can’t be measured in how many bills get passed. Will there ever be enough laws to live under? Layer upon layer of laws on top of new laws with no consideration of anything but how many. Madness. I’m mad as hell and I’m not gonna take it anymore.
If only the members of congress would truly embrace their corporatized corruption and take the money,
go on permanent vacation, and stop pretending they give a rat’s ass!
We’d all be better off.
It would be worth it to boast “My congress cretin doesn’t do anything. He’s the best!”
HHI jgreen7801 and Clark –
Again, the words of a Mr. John Adams ring true:
“In my many years I have come to the conclusion that one useless man is a shame, two is a law firm, and three or more is a congress.”
Right on, Mr. President!
Will want to get my hands on Pay Any Price after this interview, Glenn. You and he are well met. Meantime, here is the video, text, and audio of his Colby College address. It may be to his book what Orwell’s early writings were to his magnum opus, early reflections on what he witnessed.
http://www.colby.edu/lovejoyaward/past-recipients/2014-lovejoy-award-recipient-james-risen/
True to form coram nobis…
Pertinent comment and link well worth investigating.
Thanks for posting.
Thanks for posting that link.
I will definitely have to get around to checking this entire speech out.
Thank you Jim Risen and Glen G. for such an excellent interview. Keep being the gadflys you are. We need you so much.
And keep safe, both of you (and Mrs. Risen, and David M., too)
Thanks for posting this Coram. It pretty much sums up “The American Dream”~which we are all living in while reality bites us all in the you know where. Happy Thanksgiving to all the staff at TI, and the posters,good, bad and sometimes verbose! :-)
Really appreciate the transcript as I can read faster and better than I can listen and hear. ;)
I, too, highly recommend ‘Pay Any Price’. Just prepare to become extremely pissed-off and astounded at the greed and ignorance of so many of our ‘leaders’ and those who prey on them. Heart patients beware.
Please edit previous comment I wasn’t done. Sorry.
Glen,
Any reporting or investigative research on what if any sociological changes might have occurred in the general population say in the US, that may be directly attributable to the now confirmed public knowledge of the government’s massive data collection and/or their intentional obfuscating, suppression and subsequent blatant lying under oath? I failed to include the effects of losing individual 4th amendment guarantees of privacy. I’ll further define my question to include family and community dynamics involving any changes in behavior due to now altered values, morals and ethics? Has this knowledge influenced thoughts or actions with respect towards the right to indicudaul privacy of others?
Mr. Greenwald
“…….The new basic American assumption is that there really is a need for a global war on terror. Anyone who doesn’t accept that basic assumption is considered dangerous and maybe even a traitor…..”
That is as big of a fabrication as the “hands up, hands up; don’t shoot, don’t shoot” used to protest the shooting of Michael Brown. No one is considered a traitor who objects to the wars in Iraq, Yemen, Somalia, Afghanistan, Syria and so on. That’s ridiculous.
The certainly seems to be a lot of “speculation” for the reasons behind the “war on terror”. For example, the “war on terror” is about corporate profiteering, individual status, ambition and power, lucrative post-administration jobs in the defense industry, the erosion of civil liberties, a racist war on Muslims, oil interests, Israel and AIPAC, Iran’s nuclear program, the military Industrial Complex and the militarization of the police. The list is endless, of course, yet 911 is mostly ignored – an attack in which 3000 people were targeted and murdered by terrorists. That’s was the beginning of the “war on terror” which was simply not taken seriously before that time.
The best you could do in this article, Mr. Greenwald, was attempt to blame the Saudi government for 911 without any evidence that the Saudi government was behind the attack. But when has an absence of the facts prevented an opinion piece from the Intercept? The Pakistan government funded the terrorist training camps in Afghanistan used to train terrorists for murder world-wider, and the Taliban turned a blind eye to the camps. In fact, between you and Mr. Risen, there was not even a discussion of Islamic terrorism, the murderous ISIS, the civil war in Syria (where the US is for all intents and purposed is absent from the conflict), the murderous Taliban (most recently bombing a volleyball game), the brutal Pakistan TTB which regularly targets little girls for murder and/or acid attacks, Boko Haram with their “comfort” girls and al-Qaeda in Yemen which took over a province in that country that prompted a report from Amnesty International on their brutal occupation.
The simplistic idea of this article is for the US, the “war on terror” is perpetuated as an economic and political end in itself, but it takes two to tango – and while you may ignore the end game of Islamic terrorism which seeks to subjugate the Muslim world, western inaction will not make the threat disappear. Indeed, the largest targeted groups in the world are Muslims – and they don’t reside in the west.
We’ve seen this before, folks. Craig wades into comments with a GINORMOUS armful of straw, and throws it down. Then, Craig douses it with accelerant, and lets it soak in good. Finally, Craig flicks his Bic, and the pile of straw, it burns.
Is ok. Craig has lots of straw.
Interesting, the one who calls whomever disagrees with her a “Zionist” has a problem with others who call those who oppose the War on Terror a “traitor”.
Not at all. Some non-Zionists disagree with me on various topics. I’m not so low as to call them a Zionist merely for that.
Whom? Can you tell us whom who rejects Mr Greenwald’s main arguments regarding US policy you have not called a Zionist in this forum? You have lost the credibility to challenge whomever calls others ridiculous names such as traitors, unpatriotic because you build most of your arguments on qualifying whomever disagrees with you as a Zionist.
Anyone who has not opined in a Zionist fashion about Israel or its U.S. lobby.
There you go again, with the silly goose stuff.
“Zionist fashion”…..
You have become laughable now. You cannot name even ONE commentator who disagrees with Mr Greenwald’s main arguments you have not called a Zionist. That is what happened when your arguments consist of clapping for Mr Greenwald and consistently call everybody who even respectfully challenge his opinions as a Zionist, goose, straw etc…Your response to those who would call you a traitor is irrelevant as they have just reached your low level. Keep clapping!!!!!!
1. Your initial claim was that I called everyone who disagreed with me a Zionist. Upon reflection, even you came to see that was an unsustainable argument.
2. Having moved the goalposts, you now charge that I label as a Zionist anyone in comments who disagrees with Glenn Greenwald’s main foreign policy arguments. Given that the vast, vast majority of Zionists find Greenwald’s foreign policy arguments deeply threatening, that could be true.
3. You are a Zionist.
Despite Steb’s moving the goal posts as Mona said, we can all look at his(?) original wording. I recently had a strong multi-post disagreement with Mona on another subject. She did not once call me a Zionist, and actually remained calm throughout. So… there you have it. Sorry Steb, you are wrong as usual… not even a nice try.
I am curious John Kelly, do you usually support Mr Greenwald’s arguments? What was this disagreement with Mona?
Steb: John meant to say tweets. He and I had a round of strong disagreement on Twitter about matters pertaining to the Darren Wilson grand jury and evidence as known before the GJ records were released. And he’s right; I didn’t call John a Zionist. Primarily because, well, John is not a Zionist.
I think he should answer the questions himself Mona.
Steb likes to exert a little bit of control over how arguments hash out in a vain effort to win one by narrowing the opposition’s field down to one row with rusty farm machinery strewn across it. Very difficult for him/her/it otherwise.
A much simpler way to win an argument or make a decent point is to be correct once in while.
In order for me to win an argument there must be an argument. There is not an argument here. It is a statement of FACT. Mona calls whomever challenges Mr Greenwald’s viewpoints regarding US foreign policy all kinds of ridiculous names. That is a FACT. The notion of goalpost that you and her are using is actually a very inexpensive strategy to blur the main point. I do not argue with Mona about the US Space program, the bad weather in Gaza, Miley Cyrus new moves, or the US judicial system. So, she is well aware of what I am referring when I state her approach towards others who disagree with her. If labeling others who disagree with you is a past time, then you lose your credibility to challenge those who spend their energy calling Mr Greenwald, Mr Risen and their followers “traitors”. It is as if a NASCAR driver tells a Formula One driver that F1 is a sport that is too extreme. Then, the NASCAR driver should start a career in comedy.
Flailing.Flail.Fail.
Mona
“…….We’ve seen this before, folks. Craig wades into comments with a GINORMOUS armful of straw, and throws it down. Then, Craig douses it with accelerant, and lets it soak in good…….”
It’s probably the best you are going to do for a response Mona. I certainly don’t expect any more from you.
As you shouldn’t. It’s what you deserve.
Mona, you are such a parasite to TI’s comments sections.
The fact that you have admitted in the past to consciously not criticize Glenn for fear that those words will be used to attack him show how questionable and disingenuous your comments are, and spotlights your delusion that people really care what Mona has to say because she worked with Glenn years and years ago. Nobody with an ounce of credibility thinks that what you say is a reflection of Glenn. But these shortcomings could be forgiven if you weren’t also so insulting and dismissive of others’ viewpoints. You see yourself as Glenn’s white knight who must protect his honor across the Internet realm, but I’d argue that your insistence to demean or reject disagreeable viewpoints pushes less confrontational readers away from the site. It’s stunning really that you follow Glenn like a gleeful puppy dog as he unrelentingly criticizes others, but when the tables are turned, even to a small degree, and ANY criticism is aimed at Glenn, you cannot fathom it. It is a textbook case of hero worship.
This is a microcosm of your comments. You aren’t capable of actually addressing the substance, but instead just hide behind unspecified accusations (why does he “wade into ginormous amounts of straw”?) and empty rhetoric.
Perhaps TI should add a “mute” button so that people like Mona who have no intent to actually discuss issues, can just mute all those who have disagreeable viewpoints. This would ensure she only encounters like-minded people.
Nate, we’ve been over this ground before. Various Glenn haters have featured my views at their web sites: Bob Cesca, t@rzie, Charles Johnson, to name only a few. They attribute to Glenn what I tweet and post.
This is very annoying to me, and does cramp my style. I’m not free to follow lines of attack on people I find awful (such as a particular journalist) because my interest could be attributed to Glenn, and Glenn doesn’t necessarily wish to be allied with my interest in certain bad behaviors. (Believe it or not, he and I do disagree.)
And really Nate, for you, of all people, to decree that *I* am a fouler of the comments section, well, it is to amuse.
“‘…….The new basic American assumption is that there really is a need for a global war on terror. Anyone who doesn’t accept that basic assumption is considered dangerous and maybe even a traitor…..’ – Greenwald
[…] No one is considered a traitor who objects to the wars in Iraq, Yemen, Somalia, Afghanistan, Syria and so on. That’s ridiculous.” – CraigSummers
Yes it’s ridiculous. Thanks for pointing this out BTW. However, the sentence preceding your outcry is untrue. The notion that it was traitorous to even question those who drove the GWoT was very well received in the Bush years. It hasn’t gotten much better today.
I’ll never forget the orgy of (highly encouraged) public cowardice that defined that era. It was and is a damned disgrace. Your strident claims to the contrary are — as Mona said — a flaming pile of organic fertilizer feedstock.
I say foolish things online as a matter of course, darling. But, I’ve never managed to approach this level of fail. Ta-ta.
Fluffy
“……The notion that it was traitorous to even question those who drove the GWoT was very well received in the Bush years. It hasn’t gotten much better today…….”
There is little doubt that GWB used the attacks of 911 to pressure Congress into supportive votes for the Patriot Act, the creation of the Department of Homeland Security and the invasion of Iraq (and others). Democrats still avoid being painted as weak on national security issues and foreign policy like the plague. See Obama’s record over the past six years, for example. But being called weak on national security issues is a whole lot different than being labeled a “traitor”. It’s just patently false to suggest that Democrats (or others) were labeled traitors for questioning Bush policies on the Global War on Terror. Democrats feared the political consequences in 2001 and they still fear the political consequences today.
Ta-ta
Craig, you do not have to look hard to find some real nuts; so let’s not deny that the word traitor is used by some.
Remember, it was W who said that the war on terror would not be over until every such group has been eliminated. That was not a prediction, but rather a statement of intent of perpetual war, and those who oppose such a fundamental national policy are very unpopular with those who benefit, even if the T word is only used by a few.
Craig, you are either a liar or a fool. It was a commonplace in the rightwing “blogosphere” of 2003-2007 or so, for wingnuts to label Democrats and war opponents as traitors. As but one of myriad examples, in 2004 the Free Republic site ran this headline; “Kerry Says US in a Mess in Iraq (Traitor Alert).”
And it was not remotely just blogs. In 2007:
Get a grip on reality, Craig.
Mona
As you might know, Mona, 2007 was a particularly bitter year in the war in Iraq – at home and abroad. For example, Rahm Emmanual used the war in Iraq to help bring the Democrats to power (David Ignatius, “An Opening for the Democrats”, Washington Post, January 12, 2007):
“……….Now, with Bush binding himself even more firmly to an unpopular war, Emanuel wants to use that rising anger to make the Democrats the nation’s true governing party. With House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Emanuel plans to use Bush’s Iraq speech to pose what amounts to a vote of “no confidence” in Bush’s leadership — framing the new strategy [the surge] as a congressional motion and voting it up or down. Emanuel is certain that Bush’s strategy will be voted down and that a sizable number of Republicans will join the Democrats in rejecting the military escalation. Rather than try to restrict funds for the troops (which he sees as a political blunder that would delight Republicans), Emanuel instead favors a proposal by Rep. John Murtha to set strict standards for readiness — which would make it hard to finance the troop surge in Iraq without beefing up the military as a whole. The idea is to position the Democrats as friends of the military, even as they denounce Bush’s Iraq policy…..The country is angry, and it will only get more so as the problems in Iraq deepen. Don’t look to Emanuel’s Democrats for solutions on Iraq. It’s Bush’s war, and as it splinters the structure of GOP power, the Democrats are waiting to pick up the pieces………”
Maybe this was in part for the harsh response by Arkansas Representative Don Young. Politics is a brutal game, Mona – and the Democrats were clearly playing political games with the war in Iraq.
Thanks.
Oh for sure man.
In the meantime, you have been proven wrong about your inane denial that wingnuts do not call war opponents traitors, and worse.
The post lightly edited for accuracy:
“Mr. Greenwald
I’m big on non-sequiturs: Michael Brown has nothing to do with what you wrote here.
But I’m really big on fabrication. I have personally and repeatedly called you “anti-American” among other childish names and accusations for your objections to the wars in Iraq, Yemen, Somalia, Afghanistan, Syria and so on. It’s ridiculous that I would be dishonest enough to imply otherwise.
I certainly like to make-believe the motives behind your objections to the “war on terror”, and for good reason: I don”t have anything close to a real argument. For example, the “war on terror” has profoundly enhanced corporate profiteering, enhanced the status of a few individuals, rewarded another fortunate few with lucrative post-administration jobs in the defense industry, eroded civil liberties, propelled a war on Muslims, and has been fought to the short-term benefit of oil interests, Israel, the Military Industrial Complex, and the militarization of the police. Every single one of these things and more – the list is endless, of course – have all been affected one way or the other by the war on terror to the benefit of a few and to the detriment of many. Yet 911 – a tragic event more than 13 years-old that was exploited to silence critics of America’s global wars – still works on the really ignorant whenever some grown-up has something to say about them
9/11 was an attack in which innocent people were murdered by terrorists, and though that was terrible and tragic, their number is a tiny fraction of the innocent people murdered before and since by the US. 9/11 wasn’t the beginning of the “war on terror” – Ronald Reagan declared war against international terrorism more than 15 years earlier as an excuse to bomb Libya, and his administration funded and trained terrorists for the “dirty wars” in Central America – so my claim is just one more example of the stupid things I say. Many thousands more innocent people than all of those killed on 9/11 were tortured, raped, and slaughtered by American-trained and armed terrorists in just one country – Guatemala – as part of the international fight long before it was ever called the “war on terror”. The lesson here is that nothing I say can ever be taken seriously at any time.
There is considerable evidence that the Saudi government had some role in the attack; one only has to read and listen to what Former Sen. Bob Graham has written and said about it and the redacted portions of the report he co-wrote and has been struggling for the past decade to make public. But when have known facts prevented me from spewing nonsense on the Intercept? The US supports the Saudis and funds the Pakistan government which both funded the terrorist training camps to train the terrorists we now fight, so I turn a blind eye to this fact. In fact, between my ears there’s not even a thought of what lies behind Islamic terrorism, the murderous ISIS, the civil war in Syria (where the US is for all intents and purposes committed to “regime change”, so this fact is also absent from my thinking), and the many terrible US-funded groups and states repeatedly condemned by Amnesty International and others.
My make-beleive is that the “war on terror” is perpetuated because “they hate our freedom”, You just don’t appreciate the effort it takes to ignore the facts about Islamic terrorism. Even the Pentagon Scientific Advisory Board has found that, “Muslims don’t hate us for our freedom; they hate us for our policies” that seek to subjugate the Muslim world. My rantings will not make the facts disappear. So I’ll just keep ignoring the facts and pretend that I care about Muslims or that I know something about them, like they don’t reside in the West – actually, the most populous predominantly Muslim nation is in the Western Pacific. But I really don’t care.”
You forgot to mention one thing. And that is, America is Israel’s bit*h. We have been fighting their wars by taking out their potential “enemies” and supporting them financially, with advanced weaponry, and with intelligence info.; even after the attack on the U.S.S. Liberty; the Levon Affair; and their foreknowledge of 9-11. But, what are friends for?
In regards to “an absence of facts” on the Suadi’s involvement in 9/11, the facts are absent because the 9/11 report was never declassified, which is mentioned in the article (or transcript as it may be).
To speculate, I do not know, it may be that some 2nd cousin or something in the Saudi royal family or maybe someone who has a position of authority within the Saudi government gave money to the Al Qaeda 9/11 hijackers. We just don’t know until it gets declassified. The US government didn’t (and doesn’t) want to harm the US-Saudi relationship so they are keeping “the facts” classified. A lot of people (Senators/Congressmen) who have seen the report have made round about allusions to something like this being the case.
Nah,my moneys on the Israelis and their moving company with its cheering employees and Yahoo saying it was good for Israel and its theft of more and more land.
“……I do not know, it may be that some 2nd cousin or something in the Saudi royal family or maybe someone who has a position of authority within the Saudi government gave money to the Al Qaeda 9/11 hijackers. We just don’t know until it gets declassified……”
The key point is whether the Saudi government knowingly funded directly or indirectly (through charities) the hijackers responsible for 911. We know that the Saudi and US governments helped fund the mujaheddin and Islamists fighting in Afghanistan. The Saudis also funded and supported the Taliban effort beginning in the mid 1990s. The Saudis are also responsible for spreading fundamentalist Wahhabism throughout the world, but there are no known direct Saudi government ties to 911. That doesn’t preclude private donations from filthy rich Arab sheikhs, however.
No, what I read was that the Saudi government has escaped any blame while others have not, even if not to blame. Of course, given the complexities of the ME, everyone is connected in some way. I think everyone recognizes the special role of another of our allies, but they have nuclear weapons. (No, I do not mean Israel, Steb.)
Mona, you are wrong. He did not bring in just a big pile of straw, but rather serious distortions in what Glenn wrote.
Mike
“……Mona, you are wrong. He did not bring in just a big pile of straw, but rather serious distortions in what Glenn wrote…..”
I agree with the first half of your statement. Greenwald stated in his interview with Risen (above):
“……And there is this sort of bizarre aspect that we’ve gone to war against a huge number of countries, one of the few exceptions to which has been the country that had the most nationals involved in that attack, and whose government has been the most persuasively implicated……”
If the Saudi government has been “most persuasively implicated”, then let Greenwald bring out the evidence.
The Saudis are indeed partially responsible for the attack, but not likely in the way you’re accusing Greenwald of suggesting. 9/11 was blowback from asinine foreign policy just as much as ISIS/ISIL is from our invasion and “de-baathification” of Iraq in 2003. The CIA (under the orders of Carter and Reagan), alongside a few nations like Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, helped create Al Qaeda and the Taliban in 1980’s Afghanistan, funding, training and arming the anti-Soviet fighters, many of whom would later denounce us and form the organization that would fly planes into the Twin Towers. Go read Chalmers Johnson’s Blowback Trilogy, and Jeremy Scahill’s Dirty Wars, if you’re willing to do that much.
And civil liberties ARE being attacked. How on earth can you justify mass spying on the scale that Snowden revealed (violates the Fourth Amendment)? How on earth do you justify the codification of indefinite detention as per the 2011 NDAA (violates the Sixth Amendment)? And how on earth do you justify the Obama Administration’s attack on independent journalism and the quite frankly unprecedented use of the Espionage Act of 1917 to go after whistleblowers (violates the First Amendment)? With all of these violations of the Constitution being committed by the current ruling Establishment, would it not potentially follow that those committing said violations would consider those that would disagree with them traitors? After all, they have the apparent mandate of the ill-informed masses (all 36 or so percent of eligible voters in the last election) on their side every two years as they elect and reelect many corrupt authoritarians to Congress and the presidency.
And finally, just look at what’s happening to James Risen. He’s potentially facing jail time…FOR DOING WHAT MANY OTHER PEOPLE AND NATIONAL GOVERNMENTS WOULD CONSIDER HIS JOB AS A JOURNALIST! If that doesn’t at least make you wonder if something’s gone rotten in our government, then it’s pointless to try to convince you otherwise.
The US government is very judicious when curtailing civil liberties. Unlike many governments, which positively celebrate their abuses of power, the US government infringes on peoples’ rights only with the greatest reluctance and only if it’s the most expedient course of action. It doesn’t publicize its abuses, but rather tries to keep them secret – which indicates an ability to feel shame at its own actions. This makes America a relative beacon of freedom, an example that the rest of the world would be wise to emulate.
…that’s sarcasm, right?
I’m not sure. I do believe the US is curbing civil liberties regretfully rather than gleefully. In fact, taking away your rights probably hurts them as much as, or perhaps even more than, it hurts you. Being a ‘beacon of relative freedom’ is a worthy goal; Americans just have to learn to lower their expectations.
What kind of fact-free-zone do you reside in? What causes you to rail against reality so often to the point of making yourself look so foolish?
You’ve never heard of The Dixie Chicks? They were not only “called” traitors, their music was banned from so called conservative radio in an orchestrated campaign by monopoly radio giant Clear Channel, combined with so called conservative radio loud mouths, such as Rush Limbaugh, all over the country. Below you can listen to Natalie Maines and the Dixie Chicks sing a huge ‘In-Your-Face’ vindication song.
And then there is congresswoman Barbara Lee:
The Atlantic — Conor Friedersdorf
Video — Dixie Chicks: Not Ready to Make Nice
He’s such an utter authoritarian liar and toad.
“……and toad…….”
I got a laugh out of that Mona.
Thanks (and another compelling argument).
Mona., I recall you claimed you were at one time an ardent Zionist who came to her senses, so former Zionist would not be a libel, but might also suggest you are one teetering totter for this hairy potter. Pick a fucking side and stick to it, gurl!
Kitt
Barbara Lee made a courageous albeit incorrect vote to oppose the vote on AUMF – the only one in both houses of Congress. Letters were written to her both in support (including military personnel) and against her decision – including racists – according to the author of the article. Some called her a traitor, but the author never mentions exactly how many. Calling her a traitor was simply irresponsible, but this instance hardly indicates that people were regularly pressured with the threat of being called a traitor for opposing the war on terror. Did anyone in Congress, or the President call her a traitor?
The authorization to use force in Iraq was really sold as the war on terror especially with the lie that Saddam had been involved with 911. In addition, Saddam paid suicide bombers in Palestine for terrorist attacks against Jews, and he was suspected of having a nuclear weapons program. He also had fired (unprovoked) missiles capable of carrying chemical weapons into Israel as he was being militarily removed from Kuwait. The authorization to use military force in Iraq was a true test of the Bush policy of the “war on terror”. In fact, the intimidation was so complete that only about HALF of the democrats in the Senate and House voted negative on the authorization to use force in Iraq. Of the 258 Democratic Senators and representatives, only 147 voted NO. Seven Republiicans also voted against the resolution including Ron Paul who regularly opposes foreign intervention and still manages to regularly get re-elected in TEXAS. Now that is intimidation by the American population. I can still remember the headlines in the Wall Street Journal: 154 traitors vote against the authorization to use force in Iraq. There is no question that Bush politically used 911 and political pressure to twist the arms of democrats, but there were no wholesale demonizing of Democrats (or Republicans) as traitors.
Nobody martyrs themselves quite like the left. I stand by what I said.
What happened to “the radical left” and the “far left” and all of those other “lefts” you used to employ in your act?
Stringing together a silly as all hell wikipedeish bunch of words,as you did in that comment post, not only does not dismantle your vapors, “No one is considered a traitor who objects to the wars in Iraq,” statement, but it adds to your doltish clown reputation. So if that was what you were hoping to achieve with that comment post, that was a spectacular performance.
“…….but it adds to your doltish clown reputation. So if that was what you were hoping to achieve with that comment post, that was a spectacular performance……”
Well, you went from a rare reasonable response to your more typical – and obviously unavoidable – foray into personal attacks.
Thanks.
Your penchant for whining about “personal attacks” is as interesting as watching paint peel after watching it dry. It’s too bad that this comment system doesn’t have easy search of each commenter’s history, I’d re-post the comments by Cindy to you right before she notified us of her needing to take a hiatus from commenting. She was more blatantly honest with and about your blathering than I have ever been. There is no way to exaggerate or overstate what a tool you are.
Craig is a Zionist neocon. Nothing can move him from his hideous worldview, no matter how many times he is corrected on the facts. I and many engaged him at great length, very substantively, back at the Guardian.
No more.
For the most part, I now hurl only ridicule and mockery at Craig. It’s all he deserves.
Mona
“……For the most part, I now hurl only ridicule and mockery at Craig. It’s all he deserves……”
From one who is perpetually ridiculed on this site by posters who disagree with you (see above, for example). Take what ever strategy you desire, but it won’t prevent me from speaking.
Thanks Mona.
Kitt
“…..I’d re-post the comments by Cindy to you right before she notified us of her needing to take a hiatus from commenting. She was more blatantly honest with and about your blathering than I have ever been……”
Cindy’s responses were juvenile at best. Cindy didn’t have a clue what the term “corporatist” meant even though she faithfully used the term in support of her far left wing viewpoint. So in response to her own ignorance, she resorted to what you guys consistently do when you look foolish – she hurled a string of abusive language at me. Her responses were pathetic on the one hand, but somewhat funny as well.
Care of Cindy:
“…..Well, you just stay curious, you mentally defective, degenerate, fascist, murder-supporting piece of shit.…”
“……Most Americans are propagandized, as you well know, but you don’t want to admit it (because you’re a fucking idiot who thinks it’s good)…..”
“…..You deserve only absolute scorn, for your ideas are ultimately race-superior (which is ironic, you Jew you) and corporatist/militarist……”
“……Because you are a twit. More explicitly…… you are mentally (and in a primary sense emotionally) imbecilic, as well as surprisingly retarded in critical thinking (unlike Steb, who only pretends to be),……Thanks for your dickweed response, you brain-dead, coward, piece of shit, murder-supporting, asinine fool…..”
“……You are a classic idiot, Craig Summers….. Which leaves you, Craig Summers, and those like you from both sides of the proverbial ‘aisle’ as THE FUCKING IDIOT WHO (willfully) DOESN’T GET IT…. think twice before broadcasting your impotent, emasculated view of what should be, for you disempower yourself with every post, revealing nothing but your pathetic subservience, submissiveness and acquiescence toward demonstrably dubious ‘authority……”
My favorite was when she said “for your ideas are ultimately race-superior (which is ironic, you Jew you)”. Ha! You Jew you? What do you think she meant by that?
Of course it won’t. You’re a weeble wobble — you knock them over but they get right back up.
Nor would I want you to stop commenting. You are a superb foil. If I start substantively answering you again it will be because I have more ugly data about Israel and/or Zionists to share.
I can’t and don’t speak for Cindy. She clearly became extremely distraught over your constant spewing of vile Zionist bullshit. That happened to me as well, the first night last summer when the obscenity that is Israel was bombing the fuck out of Gazans, and you defended it. It. made. Me. Ill.
There are times when you cease to be the resident zio-clown and your views are experienced as wicked. Cindy apparently needed to take a break, and that’s understandable. We can’t let moral imbeciles like you turn us into the thing we hate.
“……There are times when you cease to be the resident zio-clown and your views are experienced as wicked. Cindy apparently needed to take a break, and that’s understandable. We can’t let moral imbeciles like you turn us into the thing we hate……..”
Yea Mona. Right. Your justification of the murder of Jews only exposes you as a hypocrite and liar. You are already something you hate. Why kid yourself? By the way, protecting a political ally like Cindy (or the beloved Greenwald) is expected, but it can’t hide that Cindy made a complete ass of herself.
Thanks Mona.
I’ve done the same with Nazis and Holocaust deniers in my time. Some people, and you are one, are so repugnant — and brazenly proud of the views that make them revolting — an empathetic Other can lose her shit.
Oh and Craig. In latest news about the fascists running “the only democracy”:
But yanno, that Italian, he’s a “leftist.” So gun him down. Just like Germany c. 1933.
Mona what about the REST OF US? You don’t give a shite who gets drown in your bucket of piss? This is embarrassing and I’m not even making the scene!! Kitt and Craig, both of you also make me want to puke into Mona’s big fat bucket. Don’t you have anything other than one another to go on about? Geesh, I got the Imperial fucking Bedroom, but that’s not special enough for this select bucket of fuckers.
I posted a response to CraigSummers’ ridiculous comment about no one being called a traitor. My comment was about the Dixie Chicks and about Barbara Lee. They were each called traitors by millions of easily duped jerks all across the country. My comment had the sin of including two links, so consequently it has yet to show up. We’ll see if it ever does. In the meantime, I wanted to vent with facts my disagreement with the fact free comment.
Terrific interview.
I do however think that both of these men are mistaken to speculate on the likelihood that Obama
was changed for the worse by entering the oval office.
What I would call Obama’s programming goes back (at least) to his entering state politics in Chicago.
His rapid rise was puzzling to some of his earliest supporters and it all happened so fast that those
who were becoming more skeptical of him in Chicago were left in the dust.
Back in 2008, the New Yorker did a profile which showed how he had already re-drawn his state senate district
to put himself in contact with the Pritzkers and their powerful neighbors while abandoning the poorer
areas of his now former district (with the help of the Daleys).
The article was called
“Making It” by Ryan Lizza in the July 21, 2008 New Yorker.
Thanks for bringing up the New Yorker article. Good reminder.
I think Risen mentions that Obama didn’t change, that he always was more conservative.
Cheers
It is the use of “I think” which could be read as being less certain than if Risen made the statements without
beginning the sentences that way and it was blatantly clear when Senator Obama voted for protecting the Telecoms
from a judgement of guiltiness for breaking established laws and when he (and his ilk) rushed to
participate in the “bailout”(sic) of blatantly corrupt “banks”(sic) without ANY application of regulations.
It was abundantly clear from some of his presidential campaign promises also.
Now that on on this, I also wouldn’t call him “conservative” because Obama is about liberally gutting and
lying. Instead of conservative, I think he is an obfuscating predator.
But, again, it was an interview which is way beyond the manufactured dimness of the vast majority of interviews out there.
Oops.
“Now that on on this” should be Now that I’m on this.
Sorry.
I don’t know how much actual booze there is at Booz Allen Hamilton, but I do know there’s a typo in your transcript. But I recommend leaving the “error” in, because I believe in ridiculing them for being drunk on power and jobs that pay so much higher than GS-15.
There are other small, unimportant errors/omissions if you read the transcript while listening to the audio.
This program is made possible by Boozy Malice Madison, a public relations firm for the 21st Century. And by viewers like you! Thank you!
Great Interview~really great to hear voices on this site. Next step I hope you can get some video on here because I for one am a pretty visual person and love to see while I hear, but heh, this is a first step and I do appreciate it! Great interview and honest answers from Mr Risen. I cannot wait to read his book, after I finish Glen’s book. Just thank you thank you both! I hope we can keep James out of jail. We need him here to keep writing and reporting and for him to stay with his family where he belongs.
Its a damn shame the other so called news outlets stopped their comments sections, ( I think we know the reasons behind their actions) because I used it as a great excuse to post a link to this actual news outlet. Greenwald 2016. I’m making T-shirts.
No longer do I need to be the crazy one to point these issues out; now there are reputable people with real backing I can just reference.
You troublemaker you!! Make the shirt. I’ll buy for sure.
Excellent interview, Glenn. This is one of the “treats” I’ve missed since your Salon days. It’s unique to hear someone tell their story in their own voice. Not having had the chance to hear James Risen speak in person, I was delighted to have this interview of yours. Thank you for including it.
Kudos, James Risen. [Mad applause, standing in the bleachers, stomping my feet, and cheering.] I love your “answer” to the Obama administration and DoJ’s war against whistleblowers. It’s the only answer that makes sense.
I’m not yet entirely comfortable with your reply to Glenn regarding your “radicalization.” I’m not yet willing to accept:
I wonder if in 5, or 10, or 15 years you’re not able to look back at that statement, and wonder if the country you think changed, was always where it was. As I am forced to look at the chain of our country’s foreign policy over my lifetime, I think I’ve been guilty of assigning it more “well meaning intent” than it deserved. Taken incident by incident, I’ve differed from people around me in how “well meaning” I thought we were, or might have been, but the chasm between myself and the people around me has only become clear in the last 8 – 10 years. I am finally willing to admit that I had no idea how different my views were. And, I can’t help but wonder if the veil won’t tear for you as well. That you’ll decide that maybe you never really understood how committed those differing views you might have rationalized aside as “nuance” – or “different in the small details” – really were from where you understood yourself to stand.
In any event… Thank you for this interview, and the energy you put in this book. It is excellent.
” As I am forced to look at the chain of our country’s foreign policy over my lifetime, I think I’ve been guilty of assigning it more “well meaning intent” than it deserved.”
Majored in History, back in the day, and the 20th century was not regarded as worthy of being called history just quite yet. Also, could not generate any interest in foreign policy, although that was more the professor than the subject matter ;-)
“…the chasm between myself and the people around me has only become clear in the last 8 – 10 years. I am finally willing to admit that I had no idea how different my views were.”
I enjoyed some very radical teaching in my time, which I think barely exists anymore. We read IF Stone’s Weekly, and discussed atheism and Communism as if they weren’t the devil. Read Chris Hedges on the “hollowing out” of all radical counterbalances to conventional wisdom and the party duopoly, and weep.
Great comment, Tally!!
Yes. It’s honestly astonishing to me that so many liberally educated people fail to understand that their own time and culture are going to be examined just as we examine yesteryear. No basis exists for assuming we are not also afflicted with harmful and false conventional wisdom.
All reasonably intelligent and educated persons should be skeptical of what is commonly believed. Santayana’s cliche is true.
Modern propaganda is a very strong and underestimated thing in America.
The answer lies in Glenn’s recent talk in Canada, where he mentions that the problem is that in The West, people believe that it’s in all those other countries where people are propagandized and not here. That belief lends itself to the populace being at a greater peril to be propagandized itself.
Talk here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B4C52glgSC4
I thought Risen’s new book was pretty good, and you could definitely feel his anger rising to the top. If I were Kirkus Reviews, I’d file this book under “Borrow It.” Anyways, here’s what I liked and disliked:
LIKES
* It was presented in an entertaining fashion, quick and easy read with not much filler or extraneous detail. Lots of different topical areas.
* The first chapter “Pallets of Cash” contained a lot of information that I believe had not been reported about how the U.S. took billions in Iraqi government funds frozen from the first Gulf War or from Iraqi oil sales and used it as a slush fund to build Iraq’s economy. They had basically zero accountability (it’s not the U.S. taxpayers’ money after all, just the Iraqis!) and went missing and may be in Lebanon.
* The Chapter “Rosetta” was highly entertaining and probably the strangest chapter. It was the Chapter that Glenn refers to above about the post 9-11 legal team that wanted to see if they could track the funding of the 9/11 conspirators back to Saudi Arabia. Unfortunately, there isn’t a conclusion on that matter, but the Chapter’s focus is more about how the legal team hired this ridiculous and suspect person named Mike Asimos, who was basically a complete idiot and pathological liar who Risen indicates was doing work for the law firm while simultaneously sharing their records with the government (the law firm seemed to know this and not mind). He eventually teamed up with some rogue FBI Agent to try to lure a potential informant to the U.S. to help on the case and instead the guy ended up getting arrested by the DEA. Basically, everything this Asimos guy does leaves you shaking your head.
* Chapter “Too Big To Fail” about contractor KBR and how they had more than 50,000 personnel in Iraq, making it almost impossible to hold them accountable for reckless use of burn pits and shoddy electrical work.
* “The War on Decency” was my favorite chapter in the book as it focused on torture and gave the perspective of one of the torturers who is basically nonfunctioning. The guy was clearly a scumbag but it is interesting to read about how his perspective has changed. It also discusses the USG’s rationalization of enhanced interrogation techniques such as waterboarding as not being torture and The American Psychological Association’s role in the process.
DISLIKES
* Some of his arguments were simplified sound bites that seem to appeal to indignants. Risen says in the prologue that “After issuing an Executive Order to close the prison at Guantanamo Bay on his first day in office, Obama changed course and kept it open.” As if it were that straight forward. No mention of Congress’s obstruction and efforts and fear-mongering from people like Congressman Frank Wolf; bans on sending prisoners to particular countries; requirements needed to transfer detainees from the prison, and the derailing of plans to transfer inmates to Illinois. Obama deserves blame for not using his bully pulpit to push harder for its closure, but Risen’s characterization of this matter was threadbare and misleading.
* Risen says the widely accepted talking point that the Obama Administration launched a draconian crackdown on the press, spying on reporters while prosecuting more leakers and whistleblowers than all previous administrations combined. Scott Shane and Charlie Savage of the NYT dug into this matter a lot deeper than Risen and noted that the “[administration’s unmatched record in prosecuting leaks] was unplanned, resulting from several leftover investigations from the Bush administration, a proliferation of e-mail and computer audit trails that increasingly can pinpoint reporters’ sources, bipartisan support in Congress for a tougher approach, and a push by the director of national intelligence in 2009 that sharpened the system for tracking disclosures.” Furthermore, has Obama arrested any reporters thus far? Nope, the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press indicates that there were 4 reports from 2001 to 2006 (including Judith Miller), and many before that. Perhaps Risen will be thrown in jail and can bolster his point.
* I thought the Chapter “The New Oligarchs” was pretty weak. It vilified the chairman of General Atomics, creator of the Predator drone. It is basically a “blame the gun manufacturer for the use of the gun” spiel and then pointing a finger at them for “enabling the American government to turn to the dark side,” as if he is personally responsible for the use of drone signature strikes and double taps.
* The War on Normalcy chapter was a not very convincing segment about post 9/11 creation of the DHS and how it made traversing from Vermont to Canada more difficult for some people. It didn’t strike me as a very compelling microcosm of how things have changed post 9/11. Better examples of the war on normalcy would be TSA.
* The War on Truth was a retread of the whole Binney/Drake/Roark NSA stories about Trailblazer v. Thinthread and how they were suspected of leaks and raided. If you haven’t read this, it’s good but for me, it was basically a repeat of Jane Mayer’s excellent report, but unlike her reporting was exclusively from the perspective of the aforementioned, and at times does read like Drake’s concerns about privacy issues included some revisionist history, especially since their complaint to the Inspector General decided NOT to address their supposed qualms with domestic spying.
* Risen comes across as naive and uninformed on cybersecurity, dismissing it as the “new buzzword in Washington.” I think Target, Home Depot, JP Morgan Chase, Sony, Microsoft, Google, and others would beg to differ.
* The ebook (iOS) had no footnotes or endotes!!
Mr. Risen:
Should you be reading these comments, please be advised that most of the regulars here do not generally take Nate seriously. He’s a bumbling gadfly and picker of nits.
Yeah, I’m sure he would be devastated that I purchased his book and shared my thoughts. The nerve!!
In Mona’s world, criticism, even mixed with appreciation, is intolerable.
Mona,
Should you be reading these comments, I have a question: Have you read Mr. Risen’s book? I have and Nate has made some germane points. Mr. Risen has the U.S. government after him; do you really think your daft and hackneyed complaints about Nate matter? “He’s a bumbling gadfly and picker of nits”? Risen is writing about the 21st century; shouldn’t you drop Jane Austen’s vocabulary? Enough with the star-whatevering.
Nate’s comment here should be used as a template for anyone commenting on any article anywhere. Instead we get personal attacks and a repeat of talking points, whether they are from the left, right, or the libertarian camp.
We should always question what we hear and read because even those who are fighting a corrupt system can simplify what they are reporting to the point that it misleads.
Mr. Risen,
You only have to skim through the brain numbing BS these clown gin up for themselves to shoot down to understand why I am proud to have achieved ejection seat status in this clown car.
@GG Hey Glenn, I know you have a proclivity toward giving talks off the top of your head, so – question for you. Did you prepare the questions you were going to ask, or maybe broad themes to address, or did you just start talking w JR and see where the conversation led?
Really good interview. You could get paid for doing stuff like this…
Cheers.
An excellent interview. I suggest that listeners read along with the transcript. I would like to see more of these interviews at TI–including video interviews.
Incidentally, the audio only used about 27 MB of bandwidth.
agree on the video!
It must be noted how weird it is for two investigative journalists to dance around 9/11. Weird as in why don’t these guys have more curiosity about the terrorist attack that supposedly justified the Permanent War on Terror. Is it really out of bounds to wonder whether people who stood to profit in the billions after 9/11 were involved in obstructing al Qaeda investigations before 9/11?
Any way to download the audio file?
I just changed the permission settings. You can now download from the Soundcloud page.
Thanks, I hope it will be the norm for the Intercept. Great interview.
To download a Wave Sound (.wav) file, just click on the download arrow icon located to the top right within the TI Soundcloud Frame/dialog box (next to the Share Track arrow). Then a dialog box will open for you to save or open the file. There may be copyright issues depending on how you use the file.