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Is There Really a War Going
On?
By James Preston Allen, Publisher
The other day, I was asked
somewhat innocently by Jack Baric the former editor of that other
publication in town, what it was like during the Vietnam War because,
“this just doesn’t seem like we are at war” now. Well, there’s a simple
and a complex answer to that, young Jack, most of which has to do with how
the corporate owned media reports the war, or in this case doesn’t report
the war.
With Vietnam—this long into the quagmire—the nightly
war reports routinely showed experienced and well-known reporters in the
field, often with pictures of wounded soldiers and actual battlefield
scenes that showed some of the real horrors of war. Since that time (and
as a direct reaction to the embarrassment of losing Vietnam), the US
military tightened the reins on the media, ultimately embedding them with
the troops in Iraq and heavily censoring all news releases for the
domestic market. Hence, what we see on our evening news, consistently
titled on almost every station as, the “War For Iraq” are
sanitized, cleaned up reports sans wounded soldiers or any of the blood
and guts that graphically repulses us to the gruesome realities of war.
(The only report that comes close to this is the nightly report of car
bombings in Baghdad, but there are rarely pictures of dead bodies.)
Hidden behind the patriotic fervor of the US media
conglomerates is their total acquiescence to this President, with a
lap-dog mentality towards not questioning his War On Iraq and the
greed of the military-industrial-complex’s profiteering. If you peel back
the veneer of ownership to see that General Electric, which owns NBC, is
also a major military contractor then you begin to see how they have
compromised American journalism. This if a difference between then and
now. Only four years after the invasion are we being told about the lies
that were offered us, broadcast to the nation by our “trusted” media
outlets, that fooled much of this nation into believing that there were
legitimate security reasons to invade a sovereign nation without
provocation—a nation that was actually an enemy of those who
attacked us on 9/11.
I was never fooled by this evasion of the truth, Jack,
I knew from the very beginning that this didn’t pass the smell test. Heck,
it didn’t even pass the military’s own Powell Doctrine, crafted by the
military specifically to avoid another Vietnam! The lack of candor,
dependable civilian support for the real mission, sufficient troops, and
an exit plan—all of these missing elements were known to the military as
absolutely vital for success.
But if the military remembered, the politicians never
learned. And so it turns out this whole mess in Iraq is like
Dick Cheney and Don Rumsfeld justifying the tragic mistakes in
Vietnam (which ended so deplorably on their watch as the first
crooked President in recent memory was about to be impeached)—just
to prove that they weren’t wrong then and they sure as hell won’t be now,
as long as we “stay the course.”
Since Vietnam, the warmongers in Washington DC have
realized that they could not depend on a military draft to pursue
unpopular wars, which is all that we have had between then and now. Thus,
there are no campus uprisings or students shot at Kent State. The all
volunteer army and repeated deployments of National Guard units have been
used to place the burden of war on either working class citizens, mostly
minorities, and on the aging guardsmen of my generation who never thought
that they would have to fight another illegal war. America is full of
opportunities isn’t it?
The thing is that this war has been hidden in plain
view from the public and sanitized for public consumption. It is shilled
to the press with administration talking points, planted stories, embedded
reporters, and coordinated propaganda via the office of Public
Diplomacy––grinding out news like so much pork sausage from a meat
grinder. This gives us, in the end, censored news reports. That so many of
us just shrug it off saying “all governments lie” is only more cover for
those doing the lying, and is no justification for this war.
The other thing you are missing, Jack, is that you
personally have not been impacted by this war––that you know of yet! They
haven’t tapped your phone yet or carted off every man with a Croatian last
name to Guantanamo. But let me share a little personal experience. At 17,
I participated in the peace demonstration when President Johnson came to
speak at the Century Plaza Hotel. At one point the LAPD panicked
(overreacted), and like the protest that occurred this May Day at
MacArthur Park, the police batons were swinging indiscriminately. I saw
unarmed citizens running from their own police force, some of them
bleeding, some of them with children and mothers, and the sting of tear
gas in the air and choppers flying. That war was brought home to me and
thousands of my generation. This was caught on the local TV and could not
be hidden from the local news crews—just like this last time when several
of them were themselves beaten by LA’s “finest officers” in blue. That we
now have the same police force that has once again been armed for military
reaction, ostensibly to protect the homeland from terrorism, but which
will inevitably be used on us, is how you will come to know this
war.
The war on the home front will be experienced long
after we get out of Iraq with increased surveillance of workers and
civilians on the waterfront, at our airports, in our schools, and on our
computers. National ID cards will be mandatory and security at every
juncture will be heralded as the solution while we forfeit the very
liberties that supposedly the authorities are sworn to protect! Repression
will be saluted as liberties are denied. The permanent police state will
be much more sublime and its tyranny so complete by the time they come for
you, Jack, that you will probably end up apologizing to the officers who
lead you away for the inconvenience you have caused them––a violation of
which you are ignorant.
Now I know some of you will call this an exaggeration
or some might even think it extremist, but it has happened here in
America, here in California, and here in San Pedro all before. They
arrested Upton Sinclair for reading the First Amendment on Liberty Hill,
killed striking workers in 1934 and arrested hundreds of Japanese
fishermen on Terminal Island in the aftermath of Pearl Harbor.
That you think it can’t happen here, that it isn’t
happening already, in bits and pieces, is only an expression of what? |
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