SADDAM: THE $1 BILLION OFFER
Saddam offered to leave Iraq in exchange for $1 billion. Bush himself said that Saddam could leave the country and the invasion would be called off (no one took that seriously, but still, he said it).
We've spent over 500 times that on our invasion and killed over a million people and lost tens of thousands in deaths and injuries (the cost of which will be in the billions as time goes on).
9/11 Every Day For Over 10 Years
Many will dispute the 1 million casualty estimate. They will do so because it's a conscience-pricking number. That number of deaths, proportionally speaking, is equivalent to a 9/11 casualty rate EVERY DAY in Iraq for over 10 years.
But suppose you argue that the 1 million casualty figure is impossibly high. OK, let's cut it in half--that's an equivalent 9/11 every day for 5 years in Iraq. Or take a fifth of that--an equivalent 9/11 every day for one year (this illuminating device stolen directly from Arthur Silber).
Support Our Troops--They're Fighting For Our Slavery
So Saddam offered to leave if we'd pay him 1/500 of what we have ended up paying. SO FAR.
But they turned him down. Because the war wasn't about bringing democracy to Iraq. It was about extending the arm of the corporatocracy and using the war as an excuse to increase the power of the government at home while decreasing our civil liberties.
And now that we're in Iraq, we'll be there for decades. They aren't building the largest embassy in the history of the world just for shits and giggles, you know. They're building it to keep us in endless war, which is "patriot" code for endless slavery.
Showing posts with label corporatocracy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label corporatocracy. Show all posts
Friday, September 28, 2007
Sunday, August 19, 2007
GEORGE SHILL, SPOKESGEEK FOR THE CORPORATOCRACY
Who will speak for the voiceless corporatist?
George Will will.
Who will pimp the principle of socialism for the rich and the free market for the poor?
George Will will.
Who will rejoice in having our economy "insulated from democracy?"
George Will will.
Who will defend the "victimization of the many by the few?"
George Will will.
Who will openly advocate that "let the buyer beware" should be the guiding principle of our economy?
George Will will.
I wish George Shill would take his baseballs and his thesaurus and retire to Richistan and leave us alone.
Caveat venditor!
Who will speak for the voiceless corporatist?
George Will will.
Who will pimp the principle of socialism for the rich and the free market for the poor?
George Will will.
Who will rejoice in having our economy "insulated from democracy?"
George Will will.
Who will defend the "victimization of the many by the few?"
George Will will.
Who will openly advocate that "let the buyer beware" should be the guiding principle of our economy?
George Will will.
I wish George Shill would take his baseballs and his thesaurus and retire to Richistan and leave us alone.
Caveat venditor!
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
PROFIT OVER PEOPLE (PART THE UMPTEENTH)...AND THE "IRAQ EFFECT"
Three stories caught my eye today. They all have something in common--trying to minimize costs while sacrificing people's livelihoods.
Here's the first one about Citigroup eliminating 17,000 jobs--yes, 17,000:
I assume that "lower-cost locations" means somewhere outside the United States. And so it continues, the quest for profit over people.
Here's the second one, about Walter Reed hospital:
The "hold-down on costs and expenses" means that profit takes precedence over caring for wounded soldiers. The move to privatize services at Walter Reed led to the exodus of many long-time employees.
And the third one, about Jefferson Davis County Schools in Mississippi:
Iraq Effect, Fucked-up Priorities and the Triumph of the Corporatocracy
I'm not really sure how this fits into my little thesis here or if it even does--obviously there's not a corporation involved in this story, so there's not really a profit motive to cut jobs. But I suppose the connection to the other two stories is this--fucked-up priorities.
By which I mean, this school story is a perfect example of the "Iraq effect"--the sense created by the myth that we're doing a good thing "helping" people overseas yet our own children and communities go wanting. The conservative choir, directed now by John McCain, is always singing the tune called "But what about all the good things we're doing in Iraq?" By which they mean painting schools, building hospitals, insuring universal health care, and creating a haven for the corporatocracy.
The problem is, we're spending so much friggin' money to be in this unnecessary war that has only exacerbated terrorism and completely defeats its own supposed purpose, that Jefferson Davis County schools has to lay off teachers, which means classrooms that are more crowded, courses that aren't offered, etc. So Iraqi schools supposedly get painted and we have to lay off teachers.
And all to save money! Money that's going right down the shitter and into the hands of Halliburton and Blackwater and who the fuck knows who else in the wasteland of Iraq. Don't forget the pallets of billions of dollars in cash that just disappeared. Could some of that money been used to keep teachers at Jefferson Davis County schools?
The Crux of The Biscuit-round and round it goes
That's called "fucked-up priorities." That's how the school story is connected to the corporate stories--war is a racket for the corporatocracy which steals money away from our schools, our communities, and our future to make a buck off a protracted, ill-advised, immoral war that not only doesn't make us safer but also puts us in danger.
And then that profit is used in turn to eliminate 17,000 jobs and bid for services at veteran's facilities...and round and round it goes.
Three stories caught my eye today. They all have something in common--trying to minimize costs while sacrificing people's livelihoods.
Here's the first one about Citigroup eliminating 17,000 jobs--yes, 17,000:
"NEW YORK (Reuters) - Citigroup Inc. (C.N: Quote, Profile , Research) said on Wednesday it would eliminate 17,000 jobs, or about 5 percent of its workforce, in a broad restructuring designed to cut costs, boost profit, and bolster a lagging stock price.
An additional 9,500 jobs will move to lower-cost locations, including two-thirds through attrition, meaning 8 percent of the bank's 327,000-person workforce will be affected by the restructuring."
I assume that "lower-cost locations" means somewhere outside the United States. And so it continues, the quest for profit over people.
Here's the second one, about Walter Reed hospital:
"In addition, the Pentagon made problems worse by ordering a hold-down on costs and expenses — dubbed "efficiency wedges" — even as Walter Reed began experiencing an influx of thousands of veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan."
The "hold-down on costs and expenses" means that profit takes precedence over caring for wounded soldiers. The move to privatize services at Walter Reed led to the exodus of many long-time employees.
And the third one, about Jefferson Davis County Schools in Mississippi:
"PRENTISS, Miss. -- The Jefferson Davis County school system is cutting 16 teaching positions in order to save money.
Superintendent Wayne Fortenberry made the announcement at a school board meeting Tuesday.
Fortenberry said that the teachers, who were let go based on seniority, are part of a reduction-in-force plan designed by state financial adviser Diane Day."
Iraq Effect, Fucked-up Priorities and the Triumph of the Corporatocracy
I'm not really sure how this fits into my little thesis here or if it even does--obviously there's not a corporation involved in this story, so there's not really a profit motive to cut jobs. But I suppose the connection to the other two stories is this--fucked-up priorities.
By which I mean, this school story is a perfect example of the "Iraq effect"--the sense created by the myth that we're doing a good thing "helping" people overseas yet our own children and communities go wanting. The conservative choir, directed now by John McCain, is always singing the tune called "But what about all the good things we're doing in Iraq?" By which they mean painting schools, building hospitals, insuring universal health care, and creating a haven for the corporatocracy.
The problem is, we're spending so much friggin' money to be in this unnecessary war that has only exacerbated terrorism and completely defeats its own supposed purpose, that Jefferson Davis County schools has to lay off teachers, which means classrooms that are more crowded, courses that aren't offered, etc. So Iraqi schools supposedly get painted and we have to lay off teachers.
And all to save money! Money that's going right down the shitter and into the hands of Halliburton and Blackwater and who the fuck knows who else in the wasteland of Iraq. Don't forget the pallets of billions of dollars in cash that just disappeared. Could some of that money been used to keep teachers at Jefferson Davis County schools?
The Crux of The Biscuit-round and round it goes
That's called "fucked-up priorities." That's how the school story is connected to the corporate stories--war is a racket for the corporatocracy which steals money away from our schools, our communities, and our future to make a buck off a protracted, ill-advised, immoral war that not only doesn't make us safer but also puts us in danger.
And then that profit is used in turn to eliminate 17,000 jobs and bid for services at veteran's facilities...and round and round it goes.
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