stilltrucking wrote: Yes,
I read the article.
I'm not convinced. The questions you're asking show that either you comprehended none of it, or that you
read none of it. If you
disagree with its premises, on the other hand, why not just come right out and say it, and explain why?
What is necessary?
Whatever gets the task at hand done. Since we're talking about the task of ending the war, the simple answer is: make the war cost too much (in whatever sense of cost you like) to maintain, forcing a withdrawal.
I would say that we leaving Iraq would be a good first step.
Great. Are Americans prepared to do what it takes to make that happen? I'm really troubled by what I've seen since 2003. The first protest I have ever attended was the one in February of that year. It was the largest (cumulative) protest in human history, which should be more than inspiration enough that
we are the majority. What else did we need? Why have four years passed without any meaningful disruption of the war machine from our vantage point (with one small exception I can think of: activists in Olympia, WA, have, for now, prevented military shipments from leaving their port)?
The time is stale. If we don't act, we are likely to face further consequences such as 9/11.
Not sure what 9/11 has to do with that, except it was the bogus excuse for the war.
Which war? It seems like your history comprehension ends at March, 2003. 9/11 was also
used as an excuse for another war that began prior to 9/11. No one seems to care about that. And if you had read the article I linked, you'd understand that what I'm saying is that 9/11 doesn't even begin in 2001, it begins in 1492. There are 515 years of imperial criminality that began when, to quote the article's author, "a lost Italian seaman flying the flag of Spain washed up on shore half a world away from where he thought he was, and got himself known as a great navigator." Columbus and his successors led a campaign of genocide that obliterated tens of millions of people.
There is a direct path from US expansion across the continent, into transcontinental imperial adventures of the Spanish-American war (where the US seized several Spanish colonies in the name of "liberation"); the war in the Philippines (where the US killed 30% of the population to "liberate" them); the battle of empires otherwise known as the Great War; the mass murder of Japanese and German civilians in firebombing attacks in World War II; the anti-democratic subversion of socialist and nationalist movements and fairly elected governments in Italy, Greece, Guatemala, Iran, Iraq, the Philippines, Indonesia; the slaughter of over three million people in Indochina (Viet Nam, Cambodia and Laos) to "liberate" them from the nationalist movements we called "communist domination"; support for anti-nationalist death squads in Colombia, el Salvador, Guatemala; coups in Venezuela; the support of repressive dictatorships such as the Saudi regime, the Shah of Iran, Saddam Hussein (the "Butcher of Baghdad"); support for decades of military occupation and ethnic cleansing in Palestine; support for the Mujahideen who formed the basis for al Qaeda; support for al Qaeda itself; support for the Taleban which "harbored" al Qaeda as they planned 9/11; the murder of 500,000 Iraqi children and 1,000,000 Iraqi adults by forced starvation, poisoning and blocking of medical supplies from 1991 until 2003 (these numbers are very low, they were acknowledged by some of the architects of this atrocity as early as 1998).
This list is very incomplete (really glaring omissions are the slave trade and apartheid in the US, which extend over almost the entire period of time discussed), but it is a much more complete context for 9/11 than
shrub lied, people died.
So I would have to say 9/11 was more like a knock out punch or a sleeping pill than a wake up call.
I didn't say it worked. I said it
should have been a wakeup call. Any healthy society with any sense at all would have taken 9/11 as such (well, except that said healthy societies don't do the things that make 9/11 inevitable).
The
correct response to 9/11 would have been:
1. Whoa, why did they do that?
2. What were they trying to accomplish?
3. What did we do to provoke it?
4. What do we need to do to prevent further consequences?
5. How can we make it up to the victims we haven't cared one lick about for centuries?
6. A long period of collective introspection and guilt, the result of experiencing which could lead to collective spiritual growth and recovery.
7. Stopping those who aspire to our then-former position in the world (I'm thinking China will take our place, but I could be wrong).
Instead, the response has been:
1. Bomb the shit out of Afghanistan.
2. Don't talk about Afghanistan anymore.
3. Round up thousands of immigrants and lock them up incommunicado.
4. Don't talk about the immigrants, many of whom remain locked up today, with no charge of criminal activity at all.
5. Ship some immigrants to places like Syria where they'll be tortured (despite their origins elsewhere).
6. Media circus about:
a) Why do they hate us?;
b) Tom and Nicole;
c) Tom and Angelina;
d) American Idol;
e) Hillary Clinton;
f) WMDs;
g) Hillary Clinton;
h) Is John Kerry a war criminal? (if not, he shouldn't be elected);
i) One of hundreds of rapes that went unpunished;
j) One of thousands of shootings;
k) Hillary Clinton;
7. Murder of another 600,000 Iraqis for no apparent reason.
8. Not an instance of protest worthy of the name since
before the Iraq war started (with the one exception I mentioned earlier).
9. Continuation of the policies that made 9/11 inevitable: support for Israeli occupation; support for Saudi regime; support for one proto-Saddam after another; a coup in Venezuela; oppression of nationalists (primarily Muslim) in the Philippines; support for the royal family in Nepal as it puts down a popular uprising. (To name a few.)
I don't know how to be more clear, but I guess it'll be moot if you post again without understanding. So I hope this explains what I meant by "wake-up call" and that it
should have served as such, but didn't, which is why further wake-up calls are inevitable.