In my rear view mirror, the sun is going down
Sinking behind bridges in the road.
I think of all the good things that we have left undone,
And I suffer premonitions -- confirmed suspicions -- of the holocaust to come.
The rusty wire that holds the cork that keeps the anger in
Gives way, and suddenly it's day again.
The sun is in the east even though the day is done.
Two suns in the sunset; could be the human race is run.
-- Roger Waters (Pink Floyd) 1983
Showing posts with label military. Show all posts
Showing posts with label military. Show all posts
Thursday, September 21, 2017
Friday, August 4, 2017
The Undrainable Swamp
The establishment’s concerns have less to do with peace and security than raising sales, earnings, and stock prices in the Atlantic-area's military industrial complex. And the establishment won’t abide any threat to its power.
The Swamp is so undrainable that it will end up making mincemeat of Donald Trump.... The ultimate causes of his demise are anchored deep in the failing status quo. America is so addicted to war, debt, and central bank driven false prosperity that even the most resourceful and focused challenger would be taken down by its sheer inertia.
But [Trump] is so undisciplined, naïve, out-of-touch, thin-skinned, unfocused, and megalomaniacal that he is making it far easier for the Swamp critters than they deserve. To a very considerable extent, in fact, he is filling out his own bill of indictment.
-- David Stockman (The Daily Reckoning) August 4, 2017
The Swamp is so undrainable that it will end up making mincemeat of Donald Trump.... The ultimate causes of his demise are anchored deep in the failing status quo. America is so addicted to war, debt, and central bank driven false prosperity that even the most resourceful and focused challenger would be taken down by its sheer inertia.
But [Trump] is so undisciplined, naïve, out-of-touch, thin-skinned, unfocused, and megalomaniacal that he is making it far easier for the Swamp critters than they deserve. To a very considerable extent, in fact, he is filling out his own bill of indictment.
-- David Stockman (The Daily Reckoning) August 4, 2017
Labels:
corporatism,
corruption,
economics,
government,
military,
politics,
Trump,
war
Tuesday, February 21, 2017
Trumped
[Donald Trump] is now fully at war with the mainstream media and the national security apparatchiks of the Deep State — and nothing could be more conducive to exposing the folly of Washington's imperial adventures abroad and its fiscal bankruptcy at home.... [T]he "Trump is soft on Russia" meme is nothing more than the desperate attempt of the Deep State to protect its dirty secret that America has no real enemies that can militarily threaten the homeland.... The ruling elites are determined to take the Donald down, and whether they succeed or not, it is extremely probable that Washington will grind to a halt — Watergate era style — by early spring....
[E]conomic recovery and the restoration of honest democracy in America depend upon a plunge in the wildly inflated stock market. It is that event which would finally discredit the monetary central planners at the Fed, destroy the insidious regime of Bubble Finance they have created, [and expose] the financial fraud which has permitted the Imperial City to fund the nation's bloated Warfare State and Welfare State with reckless abandon. Fiscal rectitude will only return when a thundering financial trauma demonstrates to the American public that a money printing central bank is its mortal enemy and that the Fed's charter to buy government debt and rig interest rates and stock prices must be forever revoked.
-- David Stockman (The Daily Reckoning) Feb. 21, 2017
[E]conomic recovery and the restoration of honest democracy in America depend upon a plunge in the wildly inflated stock market. It is that event which would finally discredit the monetary central planners at the Fed, destroy the insidious regime of Bubble Finance they have created, [and expose] the financial fraud which has permitted the Imperial City to fund the nation's bloated Warfare State and Welfare State with reckless abandon. Fiscal rectitude will only return when a thundering financial trauma demonstrates to the American public that a money printing central bank is its mortal enemy and that the Fed's charter to buy government debt and rig interest rates and stock prices must be forever revoked.
-- David Stockman (The Daily Reckoning) Feb. 21, 2017
Saturday, October 29, 2016
Russian Distraction
[T]he demonization of Russia [is] a way more idiotic exercise than the
McCarthyite Cold War hysteria of the early 1950s since there is no
longer any ideological conflict between us, and all the evidence
indicates that the current state of bad relations is America’s fault -- in
particular, our sponsorship of the state failure in Ukraine and our
avid deployment of NATO forces in war games on Russia’s border....
Rather, the Evil Russia meme seems a projection of our country’s own insecurities and contradictions. For instance, we seem to think that keeping Syria viciously destabilized is preferable to allowing its legitimate government to restore some kind of order there. Russia has been on the scene attempting to prop up the Assad government, while we are on the scene there doing everything possible to keep a variety of contestants in a state of incessant war. U.S. policy in Syria has been both incoherent and tragically damaging to the Syrians.
Russians stood aside while the U.S. smashed up Iraq, Afghanistan, and Libya. We demonstrated adequately that shoving sovereign nations into civic failure is not the best way to resolve geopolitical tensions. Why would it be such a bad thing for the U.S. to stand aside in Syria and see if the Russians can rescue that country from failure? Because they might keep a naval base there on the Mediterranean? We have scores of military bases around the region.
It’s actually pretty easy to understand why the Russians might be paranoid about America’s intentions. We use NATO to run threatening military maneuvers near Russia’s borders. We provoked Ukraine — formerly a province of the Soviet state — to become a nearly failed state, and then we complained foolishly about the Russian annexation of Crimea — also a former territory of the Soviet state and of imperial Russia going back centuries. We slapped sanctions on Russia, making it difficult for them to participate in international banking and commerce.
What’s really comical is the idea that Russia is using the Internet to mess with our affairs — as if the USA has no cyber-warfare ambitions or ongoing operations against them (and others, such as hacking Angela Merkel’s personal phone). News flash: every country with access to the Internet is in full hacking mode around the clock against every other country so engaged. Everybody’s doing it.
-- James Howard Kunstler (The Daily Reckoning ) Oct. 29, 2016
Rather, the Evil Russia meme seems a projection of our country’s own insecurities and contradictions. For instance, we seem to think that keeping Syria viciously destabilized is preferable to allowing its legitimate government to restore some kind of order there. Russia has been on the scene attempting to prop up the Assad government, while we are on the scene there doing everything possible to keep a variety of contestants in a state of incessant war. U.S. policy in Syria has been both incoherent and tragically damaging to the Syrians.
Russians stood aside while the U.S. smashed up Iraq, Afghanistan, and Libya. We demonstrated adequately that shoving sovereign nations into civic failure is not the best way to resolve geopolitical tensions. Why would it be such a bad thing for the U.S. to stand aside in Syria and see if the Russians can rescue that country from failure? Because they might keep a naval base there on the Mediterranean? We have scores of military bases around the region.
It’s actually pretty easy to understand why the Russians might be paranoid about America’s intentions. We use NATO to run threatening military maneuvers near Russia’s borders. We provoked Ukraine — formerly a province of the Soviet state — to become a nearly failed state, and then we complained foolishly about the Russian annexation of Crimea — also a former territory of the Soviet state and of imperial Russia going back centuries. We slapped sanctions on Russia, making it difficult for them to participate in international banking and commerce.
What’s really comical is the idea that Russia is using the Internet to mess with our affairs — as if the USA has no cyber-warfare ambitions or ongoing operations against them (and others, such as hacking Angela Merkel’s personal phone). News flash: every country with access to the Internet is in full hacking mode around the clock against every other country so engaged. Everybody’s doing it.
-- James Howard Kunstler (The Daily Reckoning ) Oct. 29, 2016
Labels:
empire,
government,
military,
mismanagement,
propaganda,
war
Wednesday, August 3, 2016
Not Me
Who's gonna fight? Not Me!
Who thinks it right? Not Me!
"The threat of war is a passing phase."
Try telling that to a waiting grave.
They say the bunkers will be safe.
They're not big enough for the human race.
Who's having fun? Not Me!
Gonna carry a gun? Not Me!
I've got to fight; I got no choice.
They'll never hear my fucking voice.
Deafened in the deathly noise
Created by their brand new toys.
Who's gonna die? Not Me!
I'll tell you why....
I won't do whatever they say
Even if it means getting put away.
That's what I think -- OK?
You've got to react -- it's the only way.
Subhumans, 1983
Who thinks it right? Not Me!
"The threat of war is a passing phase."
Try telling that to a waiting grave.
They say the bunkers will be safe.
They're not big enough for the human race.
Who's having fun? Not Me!
Gonna carry a gun? Not Me!
I've got to fight; I got no choice.
They'll never hear my fucking voice.
Deafened in the deathly noise
Created by their brand new toys.
Who's gonna die? Not Me!
I'll tell you why....
I won't do whatever they say
Even if it means getting put away.
That's what I think -- OK?
You've got to react -- it's the only way.
Subhumans, 1983
Labels:
angst,
death,
government,
military,
revolution,
war
Wednesday, December 30, 2015
Russians
In Europe and America, there's a growing feeling of hysteria.
Conditioned to respond to all the threats in the rhetorical speeches of the Soviets.
Mr. Krushchev said, "We will bury you." I don't subscribe to this point of view.
It'd be such an ignorant thing to do if the Russians love their children too.
How can I save my little boy from Oppenheimer's deadly toy?
There is no monopoly on common sense on either side of the political fence.
We share the same biology, regardless of ideology.
Believe me when I say to you, I hope the Russians love their children too.
There is no historical precedent to put the words in the mouth of the president.
There's no such thing as a winnable war; it's a lie we don't believe anymore.
Mr. Reagan says, "We will protect you." I don't subscribe to this point of view.
Believe me when I say to you, I hope the Russians love their children too.
We share the same biology, regardless of ideology.
But what might save us, me and you, is if the Russians love their children too.
-- Sting / Prokofiev (1985)
Conditioned to respond to all the threats in the rhetorical speeches of the Soviets.
Mr. Krushchev said, "We will bury you." I don't subscribe to this point of view.
It'd be such an ignorant thing to do if the Russians love their children too.
How can I save my little boy from Oppenheimer's deadly toy?
There is no monopoly on common sense on either side of the political fence.
We share the same biology, regardless of ideology.
Believe me when I say to you, I hope the Russians love their children too.
There is no historical precedent to put the words in the mouth of the president.
There's no such thing as a winnable war; it's a lie we don't believe anymore.
Mr. Reagan says, "We will protect you." I don't subscribe to this point of view.
Believe me when I say to you, I hope the Russians love their children too.
We share the same biology, regardless of ideology.
But what might save us, me and you, is if the Russians love their children too.
-- Sting / Prokofiev (1985)
Monday, November 10, 2014
endless war profiteering
"[T]he insidious increase
in power, and the influence over foreign
policy that the military has, is very dangerous. And maybe in the long run it's even
more dangerous than a coup. Because
what happens is, the power shifts gradually,
and gradually, and incrementally, over to the
war-making side, to where you wake up
one morning and all you're doing is
making war. And you have so many people, from Lockheed Martin to the Congress of
the United States, to the Armed Forces, to
you name it, who are making so much
money off that war-making, that you can't
stop it. That's not a coup, but it is
something worse in my view. It is ultimately
the destruction of our Republic."
-- Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson (U.S Army, retired) 2012 interview
-- Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson (U.S Army, retired) 2012 interview
Labels:
commercialism,
government,
military,
politics,
war
Thursday, April 17, 2014
war is a racket
War is just a racket. A racket is best described, I believe, as something that is not what it seems to the majority of people. Only a small, inside group knows what it is about. It is conducted for the benefit of the very few at the expense of the masses.
I believe in adequate defense at the coastline and nothing else. If a nation comes over here to fight, then we’ll fight.... I wouldn’t go to war again as I have done to protect some lousy investment of the bankers. There are only two things we should fight for. One is the defense of our homes and the other is the Bill of Rights. War for any other reason is simply a racket.
-- Major General Smedley Darlington Butler, USMC. 1933 speech
Labels:
corporatism,
corruption,
empire,
government,
military,
propaganda,
war
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