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Shouting
Truth To Depraved Power
...And Its Unwitting Accomplices
Stephen
Lendman Sounds Off
An Interview with Jason Miller 12-22-6
I recently had the privilege of
conducting a "cyber interview" with one of the preeminent domestic critics of
the American Empire. Despite his relatively recent start, Stephen Lendman has
rapidly become one of the most ubiquitous and well-respected chroniclers of
truth in the alternative media community. Asserting unflinching support for
social democracy, Hugo Chavez, and the countless victims of US foreign and
domestic policy, Lendman has penned a growing stack of essays assailing the
brutality of American Capitalism and the genocidal crimes of unbridled United
States militarism.
Recently receiving a well-deserved page
on Third World Traveler (1), Stephen Lendman is taking his place amongst the
likes of Petras and Chomsky, men he cites as his inspirations.
Here is a glimpse of Stephen and his
worldview:
What is your educational background and
what type of work did you do in your "former life"?
During my formal working life I read
moderately as able and followed with horror and revulsion many world and
national events but never wrote or spoke out about them. That began changing
when I retired at the end of 1999 at age 65. I began reading heavily and now
have an extensive library that includes many of the renowned giants I revere
like Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn, Ed Herman, James Petras, Edward Said, Gore Vidal
and dozens of others including many not as well known to the greater public like
June Jordan, now passed much too young and terribly missed. Her very name
inspires me for who she was and what she stood for and did in her life. A truly
remarkable and courageous woman.
I tell people I never wrote anything
other than business reports, memos and such since finishing my master's thesis
in 1959 till, by accident, late last year I wrote a long letter to Norman
Finkelstein praising one of his books. He asked permission to post it on his web
site and requested I submit it to other sites which I did, got a few postings,
and it all took off from there but slowly at first.
Please, tell me as much about your
family as you feel comfortable disclosing.
I grew up in Boston in a low
middle-income family, never had any luxuries, but did have loving parents, never
felt or was deprived, and by sheer luck and chance got into Harvard in 1952 when
a full year's tuition was $600. It was $1000 when I graduated in 1956 with a BA.
I then got an MBA at the Wharton School in 1960 with two years in the peacetime
Army (thankfully) in between. I began my formal working life as a marketing
research analyst for about seven years right out of grad school and spent the
next 33 as part of a small family business until retiring at end of 1999.
Overall, from back in school till I retired, I led a pretty plain vanilla life
as just another face in a faceless crowd. Then it began to change.
Through your writings you have expressed
your vehement support for Hugo Chavez. How do you respond to critics who
characterize him as another Latin American dictator in the mold of Fidel Castro?
I'm proud to support Hugo Chavez and
hold him up as a genuine model of a democratic leader the likes of which we
never had in this country from inception. It's because going back to the
beginning of the republic, all the hyperbole about democracy and such never
mentioned all those in the country left out of it like blacks who were slaves,
native Indians who were exterminated and only white male property owners allowed
to vote until that requirement was dropped in 1850 but not for woman who didn't
get the franchise till 1920. I doubt there were long lines at polling stations
back in those days.
Hugo Chavez is demonized in the US and
by the former ruling oligarchs in Venezuela, including those owning the dominant
corporate media there and here, because he's a real democrat representing the
greatest of all threats to the ruling class in both countries - a good example
that won over the hearts and minds of the great majority of all Venezuelans once
he fulfilled his campaign promises and gave them a real participatory democracy
and essential social services they never had before. He changed their lives
dramatically for the better, so why wouldn't they support him passionately.
Most important to Washington, his good
example is slowly spreading throughout Latin America as more long-oppressed and
denied people there want what Venezuelans now have. Look at what's happening now
in Mexico. I've written it about several times and characterized it as possibly
the early stages of a true transformational revolution that one day will free
the people from the repressive ruling class and replace it with a Chavez-like
government.
Chavez is different from Castro because
Venezuela is a democracy and Cuba is not - with a big but. Most Cubans love
Castro because he ended the brutal, corrupted, and hated old order under
Fulgencio Batista who turned the country into a brothel and haven for the
interests of US capital and the Mafia at the expense of the people. Castro gave
his people the same kinds of social services Venezuelans now have under a
socialist government with no other kind allowed. I never call him a dictator.
Who ever heard of one loved by his people? When he finally passes, it will be a
time of overwhelming and sincere grief that will be palpable. He'll be hard to
impossible to replace, and Cubans will always revere him as a great hero. I
strongly believe they'll never tolerate a return to the old order, and if any
attempt is made to impose it on them they'll fight to prevent it. Try getting
that reported over the US corporate media airwaves or the front page of the New
York Times that only portrays Castro as a ruling tyrant over an oppressed and
desperate people. Pure baloney, US-style.
The Bush administration recently waived
a ban on federal funding for right wing military training in several Latin
American nations, ostensibly to counter the "threat" of the rising Leftist
movement. In your opinion how much do those of us amongst the poor and working
class in the United States have to fear from the likes of Chavez, Morales, and
Correa?
I know about the Bush administration's
attempts to fund, train and ally with the military in Latin America that, of
course, means using them, if able, to counter or oust populist left wing
governments if we can't co-opt them another way. I don't think they have the
Pinochet model in mind as times have changed and the Chilean dictator is now
held in such disgrace (even in the grave) by people throughout Latin America. He
ended the most viable democracy in the region and replaced it with 17 years of
ruthless dictatorship only benefiting those at the top and the well-off middle
class getting enough to be satisfied and quiescent. Today the method of choice
is the fig leaf of democratically elected leaders in suits and ties even if
getting into office through electoral fraud in what Edward Herman calls
"demonstration elections" orchestrated by the lord and master of the universe
headquartered in Washington. It finds these kinds of shenanigans so effective
they're now using them here routinely, the result being eight years (if he
lasts) of George Bush and enough of his "elected" cronies along with him to give
us 'the best democracy money can buy" and that electronic voting machines (run
by giant corporations) can steal.
All ordinary working people everywhere
should pray for the health and survival of leaders like Chavez, Evo Morales in
Bolivia, Raphael Correa in Ecuador, Daniel Ortega in Nicaragua, and the
courageous leaders of the peoples' movements in Mexico like the APPO leadership
in Oaxaca, the masses on the streets of Mexico City supporting Lopez Obrador
denied the presidency he won by massive fraud, and the "Other Campaign" of
Subcomandante Marcos of the Zapatistas (EZLN) who's a modern-day Emiliano Zapata
organizing a national movement to end Mexico's entrenched unjust system of
predatory capitalism with an iron fist enforcing it and replace it with real
social, economic and political justice for all the people.
These leaders say they stand for us,
ordinary working people whose rights have long been denied. Hopefully they'll
remain true to their public declarations and won't be pressured enough to weaken
in resolve by the forces of capital, especially out of Washington always looming
and threatening. The only heads of state working people should fear are the
oligarch types like the Bush neocons who serve the rich and powerful and have
contempt for the public welfare. In the halls of power around the world, most
leaders support the privileged, do far too little or nothing for the majority,
and that's the burden that must be overcome.
How much chance do you give the
Bolivarian Revolution of succeeding? [For the purpose of this question, success
would mean that virtually all nations of South and Central America had converted
to a form of social democracy along the lines of Venezuela, rejected"free
trade", renegotiated their debt with the World Bank or IMF (or simply defaulted
on it), severely limited or abolished transnational corporate exploitation of
their people and resources, provided education and health care to their poor,
and created more egalitarian societies].
The Bolivarian Revolution or Project
achieved wonders in eight years following on generations of corrupted oligarch
rule by the small slice of the Venezuelan rich and another 10 - 20% of the
population (called sifrinos) at the top getting enough crumbs or healthy enough
servings to want to preserve the old order while not giving a damn about the
poor that at one time was as much as 80% of the population, many in a desperate
state. The US entered the picture around the early 1920s after oil was
discovered there that even then was too attractive a lure for US interests to
ignore.
Chavez changed everything for the great
majority after he took office. He lowered the poverty rate from about 62% after
the crippling 2002 - 03 oil strike and aborted April, 2002 two-day coup to
around one-third of the population plus all the great social benefits including
first class health and dental care and free education to the highest level -
written into the Constitution to mandate them by law. This is something
unimaginable in the US. If the public here knew what Venezuelans get and they're
denied, it has to be wondered how great a level of outrage they'd be demanding
the same things. Most people here don't know it because the dominant media make
sure they're kept dumbed-down, distracted and uninformed about the most
essential things they need to know to improve their lives.
Still in Venezuela, despite all the
great advances benefiting those most in need of them, the problems facing the
Chavez government are daunting. Massive corruption is endemic and the
bureaucracy is stifling and entrenched - because it was that way for generations
before Chavez was elected, and it will take a great many more years of
determined effort and committed leadership to overcome most of it. Add to that
the long shadow from Washington where the Bush administration has already tried
and failed three times to oust Chavez with another attempt sure to come sometime
ahead by whatever new devious scheme they'll cook up. Chavez at times must feel
like a man almost alone in hostile territory, surrounded by a legion of
high-level opponents, many unidentified, including some in key positions in his
government. He understands the problems and must think he's infiltrated by a
host of Brutuses ready to pounce on him if given a chance.
As for the Revolution spreading across
Latin America, there have been baby steps only. Chavez and Castro are unique in
their attention to addressing the social needs of their people, but while Castro
rejects capitalism, Chavez, so far, coexists with it wanting it on the basis of
fairness including the rules for foreign investors requiring them to pay an
equitable amount of taxes and to be minority partners when in joint ventures
with the government. Only Evo Morales is close to Chavez in commitment in South
America, but James Petras points out he's disappointed his people by relenting
to the entrenched interests on some things going back on his word.
Rafael Correa is still an unknown entity
as he only takes office in mid-January, and it will be a while to see if his
policy backs his rhetoric. The pressure on him will be intense to prevent it as
is now being applied to Daniel Ortega ahead of his tenure also beginning in
January. It's the same thing that happened to Lula in Brazil, Nestor Kirtchner
in Argentina, and Michelle Bachelet in Chile to keep them a part of the
Washington Consensus in large measure in spite all the past horrific fallout
from it on their people still without redress.
Even knowing that, those leaders haven't
embraced anything like Venezuela has under Chavez, but they have advanced beyond
the bad old days when governments in the region only served the wealthy and
powerful, ignoring the needs of their people. There have also been more
enlightened policies on trade in the region with FTAA effectively dead thanks to
efforts from people like Chavez promoting his "fair trade" policy of ALBA, or
the Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas, as well as ALBA initiatives among
the Mercosur Southern Common Market countries of Venezuela, Brazil, Argentina,
Uruguay and Paraguay. But Washington policy makers are never idle and have been
able to sign countries on to mini-FTAA agreements through bilateral deals
showing the struggle to be free from Global North dominance has a long way to go
even in areas where advances have been made.
Chavez is gaining allies by using his
nation's oil wealth to offer favorable loans to some of his neighbors freeing or
reducing their burden from effective enslavement by the Washington-controlled
IMF, World Bank and other international lending agencies. In sum, there are
miles to go for the Latin American nations to emerge out of the dark ages of
Global North dominance and exploitation led by the US and no guarantee they'll
get there even in Venezuela that will always be threatened with the possibility
of losing what they've already gained - as long as the US remains the imperial
power in the region and corporate interests prevail.
Do you consider yourself to be a
socialist, or perhaps a social democrat?
I consider myself a social democrat
bordering on believing in a modified socialist philosophy. I was a "capitalist"
for 33 years with a very small "c." I believe in that kind of capitalism because
it's not predatory, and it's the kind Adam Smith espoused. He hated the savage
kind of his day like the monopolistic practices of the British East India
Company and believed in many small, local businesses competing fairly with each
other. If he were alive today he'd be railing against the neoliberal Washington
Consensus model including the destructive policies under "globalization" that
exploit the vulnerable multitudes as just another commodity for the interests of
"big" capital.
Briefly, what are some of your thoughts
on Fidel Castro and what do you think of the years of US sponsored state
terrorism against Castro?
I covered Castro briefly above. Overall,
I support him for what he's done. If there were no oppressive US embargo, Cuba
would be a wonderful country to live in even under one-party rule as long as you
support that kind of governance, which I do. I hope Fidel recovers fully and
lives 100 years or longer. The great majority of Cubans do too.
US policy against Cuba for nearly a half
century has been brutal, unrelenting and, of course, illegal. It's a wonder
Castro was able to survive the hundreds of US attempts to kill him including a
nearly successful one when the assassin had a hidden gun in a camera, got to
within a few feet of him in a clear line of unobstructed sight, and then
chickened out at the last moment. That was in the 1970s if I recall. There have
also been hundreds of US state terror attacks against Cuba of all sorts causing
destruction, great hardship and disruption. Castro overcame all of them and
achieved nothing short of a miracle. He'll be a hero to millions of Cubans for
generations to come, and he should be.
What are your thoughts on the disturbing
trend in the United States' socioeconomic structure toward extreme economic
polarization? And what do you think of the Paul Krugman article, The Great
Wealth Transfer(2), which recently appeared in Rolling Stone?
I'm appalled about the socio-economic
disparities in the US that have become so extreme economist Paul Krugman calls
them "unprecedented." I've written before about them in much detail and am doing
it again in a year end article called A Look Back and Ahead in an Age of Neocon
Rule. The state of the country is appalling and disturbing. Abroad we're
fighting two wars already lost with the possibility of a third one or more.
We're bankrupting the country paying for them along with the tax revenue lost
from the outlandish tax cuts for the rich and corporate giants. We've also lost
our civil liberties in the oppressive age of George Bush and a servile Congress
and judiciary rubber-stamping his hellish agenda and now live under Sparta-like
militarism including brutish "Homeland Security" enforcers empowered above the
law to "keep the rabble in line", including employing illegal surveillance on
everyone.
Noted author, academic, and by his own
characterization former "spear-carrier for the empire" Chalmers Johnson refers
to the leader of this Neocon administration, George Bush, as "the boy emperor."
He also says the neocons allied with him are fascists - using sanitized language
to hide the truth.
We've been slashing essential social
benefits since the Reagan years, and it's all contributing to the greatest
wealth and income disparity at least since the 19th Gilded Age of the first
generation Robber Barons. We're destroying the nation's industrial base and
exporting millions of jobs abroad, including many high-paying ones, as this
country hurtles toward "banana republic third world status and not giving a damn
how many have to suffer for the greed and lust for power of the few at the top.
Do you think that the United States will
eventually reach the point that the levels of plutocratic domination,
corruption, and tyranny rival those of so-called "Third World" nations? Or do
you think we are already there?
I mentioned Paul Krugman above and
quoted from his Great Wealth Transfer article in my year end one to be finished
right after Christmas. He's outraged and so am I, even more than he is. I think
we're getting very close to the level of "plutocratic domination" in third world
countries and exceed any of them in the level of federal government and
corporate corruption (mostly below the radar) and a state of tyranny following
the same path as Nazi Germany did in the 1930s. Most people haven't a clue that
the parallels to that era are frightening as hell, and I've written several
times that the US today is a national security fascist police state that so far
is just short of sending the jackboots and tanks to the streets, stripping off
the mask of respectability so even the dumbed-down public finally knows the
score.
You have written well-researched
articles exposing how fraudulent and farcical federal elections have become in
the United States. Do you vote? Why or why not?
I've abstained from voting since I
learned how corrupted the process was, and that was even before the 2000
election and the dominance of privatized and rigged electronic voting machines
that now count over 80% of the votes. The most fundamental of all bedrock rights
in a democracy is to have free, fair and open elections denying no citizen for
any reason their constitutional right to vote. We never had that, but today no
semblance of democracy exists and any pretense it does is just an illusion that
sadly still too many in the country believe in. But many, like me, refuse to go
along any more and choose instead to boycott federal elections. The only hope
for real change ahead has to come from the bottom up. History shows it's always
been that way, and it's why we once had a revolution in this country. I'm sure
one day we will again and equally sure we'll never get the kind of society and
culture we deserve from the kinds of elected officials we now have from either
party, equally corrupted.
Many loyalists of American Capitalism
and the Empire often challenge domestic critics of the United States with
questions such as: "If you hate the United States so much, why don't you just
leave?" As a powerful voice of dissent against many aspects and dynamics of the
United States, how do you respond to this question?
I've been asked at times why I don't
leave and move to Venezuela, Cuba or anywhere I think I can get relief from what
I rail against here justifiably. I've asked myself that too and would never rule
it out. Still, I've lived here all my life, am 72, have roots, and it would be a
tough adjustment living in a new society, having to learn a new language if
moved to a non-English speaking country, and needing to make new friends and
connections from scratch.
When did you first become aware that the
United States was not exporting "freedom and liberty" through its economic
policies and military interventions?
I've known for ages how oppressive US
policies have been abroad and at home as well. But during my formal working life
I never wrote or spoke out against them beyond occasional private conversations
with friends or family that never went into depth or got heated. Only over time
did things boil over for me once I spent more time focusing on them and then
later saw them getting worse.
I was appalled to learn the "Cold War"
was a fraud and the Russians were never coming, but we needed to convince people
they were or might to justify all the harsh policies we followed in the name of
national security. I was even more outraged when the "Cold War" ended but the
need for enemies to scare the public didn't, we never got the promised "peace
dividend," and we managed to find a way to stay in a permanent state of war.
Later I was astonished to learn this country was at war with one or more
adversaries every year since we became a nation in 1776. That's besides all the
mischief we generated abroad through agencies like the CIA created in 1947.
In your view, what is the US actually
"exporting" through its foreign and economic policies?
The US emerged after WW II as the only
dominant nation left standing. It was decided, maybe in the late 1930s, that
policies would be pursued to make this country the world's preeminent political
and economic power, and during the war the most powerful military one as well.
It worked, and we've kept that status since. I believe our preeminence reached a
peak sometime in the late 60s or early 70s and has been declining since because
of the Vietnam disaster. It accelerated in the last six years under the
disastrous Bush administration agenda worrying the hell out of the country's
power structure because they know how badly these incompetents messed things up
for them.
All US policies since WW II were
intended to build and maintain American supremacy including the "world"
institutions set up supposedly for other purposes like the UN, NATO, IMF, World
Bank and others completely dominated by Washington under all administrations.
Since that time, this country's goal has been to pursue policies serving the
interests of wealth and power and give back as little as possible to the people,
only enough "to keep the rabble in line." Even in The Great Depression, FDR got
important social policies enacted only because he and some enlightened business
leaders were scared into doing it. Economic conditions were so bad, they feared
a Russian-style revolution unless they acted to prevent it. The New Deal was a
plan to save capitalism, and the idea was better to give back enough than do too
little and risk losing everything.
We know now other corporate interests
weren't so enlightened, planned a coup against FDR to depose him and tried
recruiting General Smedley Butler to lead it who exposed it. Butler later wrote
a book on my shelf called War Is A Racket in which he denounced the kind of
military adventurism he once led saying things like he once "helped in the
raping of half a dozen Central American (banana) republics for the benefit of
Wall Street....and purify Nicaragua (for the bankers)" and much more. Butler was
awarded two Congressional Medals of Honor for his service. For his post-military
nobility, he really ended up deserving them. Where are the leaders like him
today in any part of the government or military? None I know of, and that goes
to the heart of the problem.
Despite the 1930s New Deal age of
enlightenment, things began changing after the war. It moved slowly at first
with measures like the harsh anti-labor Taft-Hartley Act in 1947 (passed over
Harry Truman's veto) that began reversing the great labor benefits under the
Wagner Act of the 30s (that to this day was the high water mark for organized
labor rights). Today, worker rights have been crushed as the corporate threat to
export jobs leaves many unions with little option but to surrender to
management. The ones able to fight back and win at times are those representing
the kinds of service jobs (mostly low-paying) that can't be offshored, like
restaurant and hotel workers.
What are your thoughts on the mainstream
media in the United States?
It's no surprise the state of the
dominant media in the country is appalling. Moneyed interests own or run it, and
they control how it's used. It represents state and corporate interests, and no
one is allowed air time on it or space in it if they are not of a single mind
(with very little wiggle room allowed). I'm writing a long article on it called
The Spirit of Tom Paine. In it I say things like the corporate-controlled media
(including the corrupted NPR, PBS and BBC) function as a national
thought-control police, but look why. In Britain from inception, the BBC had a
stated policy of serving as a voice for its government and through the years it
fulfilled it using all the technological advances that came along to do it even
better.
The same is true here in the US where
the dominant media is either corporate-owned (now by five goliaths plus cable
giant Comcast serving my building with no other choice allowed--if it even
mattered) or controlled including so-called public radio and TV (other than
Pacifica Radio, the original and still credible public radio). They're heavily
dependent on government and corporate funding to operate and thus are servile to
the interests of both. It gets even worse with NPR and PBS that defraud the
public, on the one hand, and regularly go to it asking for generous donations to
help them keep us dumbed-down, in the dark, uninformed, well-distracted and
believing the most outrageous government policies are only done in the public
interest. No one should buy this baloney or ever support the NPR or PBS
affiliates feeding it to us. Whenever they want your money, respond if you must
with a strong show of contempt and rejection and a message to their management
that one day we're coming to get you, and we intend reclaiming our public
airwaves, there to serve our interests ill-served under their aegis.
Because they failed in their mandate to
serve us, the result overall is the US public is the most uninformed and dumbed-down
in the developed world and a good part of the rest of it as well. Voices
opposing state policy or corporate interests are verboten beyond an occasional
sound bite that slips through the cracks and never resonates. The same thing is
true in the other dominant institutions that influence the public like academia,
the clergy, and the think tank community, mostly right wing, with generous
funding to spew their business-friendly agenda and government policies
supporting it.
I can attest to the way it was in school
when I was at Harvard in the 1950s. I recall only one outstanding professor on
the left, and his field was biology. His name was George Wald, and he later won
a Nobel Prize in his field. I took a required sophomore natural sciences course
with him and to this day remember how he startled us in class one day when he
said in 1953 "there is no such thing as a safe amount of radiation." He became a
strong nuclear power opponent for any purpose as I've been for many years after
learning this is a technology from hell that will end up sending us there if we
don't end its use for military or commercial purposes.
I recall one other professor in the
social sciences who went part way to the left but not nearly enough for me
today. At the Wharton School, no explanation is needed about the philosophy
espoused there. Only rarely were professors like Ed Herman allowed on the
faculty, but even he felt he was only tolerated and decided finally to retire
early because he'd had enough.
He fared much better than Scott Nearing,
an extraordinary man most people never heard of but should make an effort to
find out about. He lived an exemplary life of about 100 years until 1983 and
taught at the Wharton School after graduating from it from 1906 till at the end
of the 1915 June semester when he got a brief note from the Provost advising him
his contract wouldn't be renewed. It was because he spoke out against the abuses
of that time including child labor. Later in life in 1972, he wrote a
magnificent political autobiography called The Making of a Radical, that I read,
recommend and have on my shelves along with seven of his other important books.
He wrote many and lectured constantly. You might call him a Noam Chomsky before
the real one emerged. But unlike Chomsky's experience at MIT, Nearing's
philosophy didn't go down well in the Wharton environs. And having lived in it
for a time, it's easy to know why. He also ended up being unwelcome on any
faculty, was a pacifist speaking out against war, and once said he felt like he
was "living as an unwilling citizen in a warfare state." I share that view but
chose to stay here just as Nearing did.
What do you think of the Bush
administration's consistent refusal to engage in direct negotiations with
nations it has designated as "enemies" or "evil"?
The Bush administration, and others
preceding it, usually refuse to negotiate with nations it vilifies using
language like sponsors of state terrorism. It doesn't mean they are, just that
we say they are with the corporate-controlled media picking up the line and
echoing it. In the Reagan years we had "the evil empire" we only negotiated with
reluctantly and even then never in good faith. Today we have an axis of evil
that began with Iraq, Iran and North Korea and now is down to the latter two.
Never reported is the fact that both these nations for at least the past 20
years or so tried and failed to normalize relations with the US, wanting to live
in peace with us. It never happened because that state would run contrary to
this country's agenda needing enemies to scare the public enough to go along
with whatever outrageous schemes the administration in power wishes to pursue.
It's an old and dirty business that Nazi
Hermann Goering explained in the Nuremberg dock (before he took his own life)
when asked by a Tribunal psychologist how his regime convinced the German people
to go along with all their abuses. He explained it's as easy in a democracy as
in a dictatorship. He said "the people don't want war (but they) can always (be
manipulated by telling) them they are being attacked, and denounce the pacifists
for lack of patriotism, and exposing the country to greater danger." It always
works and shows how easily the public can be duped to believe almost anything
fed to them if it's done effectively and repeated often enough.
In the age of George Bush, Iran and
North Korea are still villains (plus Syria) along with Hezbollah in South
Lebanon and the democratically elected Hamas government in the Palestinian
Occupied Territories (OPT). They all share one common denominator making them
enemies of the US Empire. They maintain their independence as Saddam did
refusing to give it up to bow to the wishes of the ruling authority in
Washington. As a result, their leaders remain in our cross hairs and are used to
scare the public to go along with all the outrageous policies the Bush
administration followed since the 9/11 attack. The only way this country will
ever agree to negotiate with any of them, or any other less developed country we
can't intimidate, is if they'll renounce their national sovereignty and agree to
go along with US policies and interests - in other words, surrender
unconditionally and betray the interests of their people.
What do you think of Noam Chomsky's 1990
assertion: "If the Nuremberg laws were applied, then every post-war American
president would have been hanged."?
I've used Chomsky's assertion and fully
support the notion that "If the Nuremberg laws were applied (that convicted Nazi
war criminals), then every post-war American president would have been hanged."
But I'd go even further and say most every one of them pre-WW II should be as
well because their actions were hardly any different than the post-war leaders.
Chomsky posited the notion of applying
the Nuremberg laws to US Presidents prior to Bush II's rise to power. What (if
any) war crimes do you believe Bush and members of his administration have
committed?
No US administration has been more
egregious in its foreign and domestic policy initiatives than the Neocon-led one
under George Bush. The International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague,
Netherlands was established in 2002 to prosecute individuals for war crimes,
crimes against humanity and genocide for those who committed these acts and
aren't held to account for them in an existing national tribunal. George Bush,
Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld and many others in the current administration, past
and present, are guilty of all these offenses as are those in the Congress who
went along with them by their complicity or silence. They should all be made to
answer for their crimes, and if found guilty in fair trials with competent
counsel, be made to pay for them. My own view is an unqualified opposition to
the death penalty for any crime. If fairly convicted, I want them to spend the
rest of their lives in prison on hard labor.
Shifting our perspective to the Bush
Regime's actions and policies on the domestic side, do you believe that they
will utilize the power they have acquired under the Patriot Act and the Military
Commissions Act to essentially abolish the Bill of Rights, eradicate habeas
corpus, declare martial law, imprison and torture US citizens with impunity, and
suspend the 2008 election to remain in power?
I've written a lot about Patriot (I and
II), Military Commissions and (revised) Insurrection Acts along with the new
National ID Act and other abuses against the public. I've also explained Bush
declared himself a "unitary executive" claiming the right to go around the law
on his own authority pursuing whatever policies he wishes in the name of
national security with no corroborating evidence to show justification and no
checks and balances allowed to challenge him. Is there any better definition of
a dictator than that? He's using this authority to subvert the Constitution
making no one in the country or around the world safe from the power he's given
himself to inflict his harsh summary judgment on anyone without cause or
restraint. So far, it's selectively aimed at so-called "Islamofascists,"
illegally-immigrating dark-skinned people (mainly NAFTA-impoverished Mexicans)
and poor people of color in general always unable to defend themselves against
state-inflicted abuses. The Constitution and Bill of Rights have effectively
been suspended, and we're at the mercy of a rogue leader and his government
that, at their discretion, can reach out and snatch any of us, secretly
rendition us to an offshore torture-prison without anyone knowing where we are,
try us in a military tribunal without competent counsel or right of appeal,
convict us and dispense with us as they please.
If impeaching Bush and Cheney was a
realistic possibility, what then?
I believe nothing will happen from the
top down, and it's up to the public en masse to make things happen from the
bottom up. That applies to impeaching Bush and Cheney as the new Democrat-led
110th Congress took that off the table including by new House Judiciary Chairman
John Conyers who once advocated holding them to account and now backed off after
getting the authority to do it. And he's one of the good ones in the Congress.
It shows what the public is up against going into the new year. Expect nothing
substantive from the new Democrat Congress that, on issues that matter most,
will be little different than the Republican one preceding it. It's part of the
culture of corruption infesting both dominant parties in collusion with the
other institutions of power in the country equally corrupted.
If we lived in an ideal world, what
consequences would you like to see Bush, Cheney and their numerous accomplices
face?
In a perfect world, I want Bush, Cheney
and all those complicit with them held fully to account and made to pay like the
criminals they are. We should demand the book be thrown at them all showing them
the same kind of mercy they inflicted on millions of others - none at all.
Do you believe the collapse of the
American Empire is imminent, and if so, how do you envision it transpiring?
I believe the US Empire is in decline
and has been for over 30 years, but the Bush administration greatly accelerated
the process. In the Middle East alone, I go along with expert Gilbert Achcar who
believes the Bush administration was so incompetent and "stupid" it will go down
as the "undertaker" of US interests in the region. The only area we'll end up
being superior in at some point is the military one, and that won't last
forever. My greatest fear is that as we head toward losing it and the empire, we
may unleash it full force and end up destroying the planet in trying to save
ourselves unless we first do it environmentally. This is how Chomsky feels, and
I agree with him along with the other great loss he fears - our democracy. I
think that's already lost.
I don't think the US Empire will implode
any more than I feel the economy or weak US dollar will either. I believe these
things will happen slowly over time including at some point reaching an economic
calamity great enough to make The Great Depression seem like a garden party. We
don't have space enough to discuss this here in detail, but this is a view
shared by astute observers whom I agree with.
What are your views on 9/11?
I absolutely agree with people like
David Ray Griffin that either the Bush administration knew in advance about the
9/11 attack and did nothing to prevent it or their operatives actually were
behind it. Unlike Chomsky, who thinks it's near impossible the Bush
administration was behind it because if it had been someone high up enough would
have leaked the truth by now. I think that hasn't happened (yet) out of fear of
retribution, including to the families of those involved, but one day maybe it
will be.
Frankly, I don't know or care who was on
those planes any more than I care who pulled the triggers killing JFK, RFK or
MLK. I only care who ordered the "hits." Paid assassins are a dime a dozen. It's
the paymasters and their motives that matter. In the case of 9/11, the Neocons
tipped their hand well in advance in their Project for a New American Century
think tank document called Rebuilding America's Defenses: Strategies, Forces and
Resources for a New Century that was and is an imperial grand strategy for US
global dominance to extend well into the future to be enforced with
unchallengeable military power. In the document they practically preordained the
future saying to pull this scheme off they needed a "new Pearl Harbor," and
they'd hardly settled into high administration positions before, low and behold,
their fondest wish came true - happenstance or a little advance planning? I made
my choice.
If you had the judicial authority, what
you would you do with members of the Bush administration?
If I had judicial authority, I'd throw
the book at these people. The evidence against them is so overwhelming and their
crimes are so many I think prosecuting them on them all might take the rest of
their natural lives to have enough time to get it done. It's time we got on with
it.
A final comment from Stephen:
One more thought on a major issue you
didn't ask me about. I'm a committed pacifist (except in self-defense--if
attacked for real). I'm passionately anti-war and believe as Tom Paine did,
quoting him in my new article and have done it before. He wrote as an
anti-militarist that all nations should reduce their armaments by 90% to ensure
world peace. No other way will do it. Wars are fought for wealth and power
because those winning them get it. If the profit alone were taken out of wars
most all of them would never be fought.
Cut down the size of the military to a
small national defense force in all nations, and they all may end, or close to
it. Doing it would also free up those resources to devote to people needs as
well as end up making the world a much safer place for everyone. What could be
more wonderful than a world at peace with governments of the people, by the
people and working for all the people serving their needs? That's the kind of
world I want to live in and pass on to the next generation and all the ones
after that. I know you feel the same way Jason.
My final comments: Steve, I appreciate
the opportunity to pick your brain and share the enriching experience with
readers. And yes, I share your feelings and views on many of the issues we
explored in this interview. I stand with you shoulder to shoulder in your ardent
support of social justice and human rights. If we reach the point that the
United States abandons the pretenses of "democracy", I hope to find myself in
the same gulag as Mr. Stephen Lendman.
End Notes: (1)
http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Stephen_Lendman/Stephen_Lendman_page.html
(2)
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/12699486/paul_krugman_on_the_great_wealth_transfer
Selected writings of Stephen Lendman:
Chavez Landslide Tops All In US History:
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=45&ItemID=11681
Omissions in the Iraq Study Group Report:
http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2006/12/omissions-in-iraq-study-group-report.html
The Spirit of Democracy in Venezuela:
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=viewArticle&code=LEN20061208&articleId=4092
The End of the Bush Dynasty:
http://www.populistamerica.com/the_end_of_the_bush_dynasty
New Faces-Same Agenda:
http://www.rense.com/general74/newfaces.htm
James Petras' New Book - the Power of
Israel in the U.S.
http://www.worldproutassembly.org/archives/2006/10/james_petras_ne.html
The Shame of the Nation: A Collective
Perversion:
http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Stephen_Lendman/Shame_of_Nation.html
Afghanistan: The Other Lost War:
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article15146.htm
Cuba Under Castro
http://civillibertarian.blogspot.com/2006/08/cuba-under-castro.html
Democracy In America - It's Spelled
C-O-R-R-U-P-T-I-O-N
http://www.countercurrents.org/us-lendman130206.htm
It's Time to End the "Last Taboo" and
Hold Israel Accountable for Its Actions
http://www.politicalaffairs.net/article/view/3780/1/196/
Dirty Secrets of the Temple
http://www.thepeoplesvoice.org/cgi-bin/blogs/voices.php/2006/06/29/p9098
Stephen Lendman is a 72 year old,
retired, progressive small businessman concerned about all the major national
and world issues, committed to speak out and write about them. He maintains a
Website at <
http://www.sjlendman.blogspot.com >
http://www.sjlendman.blogspot.com
.
Jason Miller is a wage slave of the
American Empire who has freed himself intellectually and spiritually. He writes
prolifically, his essays have appeared widely on the Internet, and he volunteers
at homeless shelters. He welcomes constructive correspondence at <mailto:willpowerful@hotmail.com>willpowerful@hotmail.com
or via his blog, Thomas Paine's Corner, at <http://civillibertarian.blogspot.com/>
http://civillibertarian.blogspot.com/
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