Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

Editorials & Other Articles

Showing Original Post only (View all)

sad sally

(2,627 posts)
Fri Jan 20, 2012, 11:49 PM Jan 2012

The world war on democracy [View all]



Lisette Talate died the other day. I remember a wiry, fiercely intelligent woman who masked her grief with a determination that was a presence. She was the embodiment of people's resistance to the war on democracy. I first glimpsed her in a 1950s Colonial Office film about the Chagos islanders, a tiny creole nation living midway between Africa and Asia in the Indian Ocean. The camera panned across thriving villages, a church, a school, a hospital, set in a phenomenon of natural beauty and peace. Lisette remembers the producer saying to her and her teenage friends, "Keep smiling girls!"

Sitting in her kitchen in Mauritius many years later, she said, "I didn't have to be told to smile. I was a happy child, because my roots were deep in the islands, my paradise. My great-grandmother was born there; I made six children there. That's why they couldn't legally throw us out of our own homes; they had to terrify us into leaving or force us out. At first, they tried to starve us. The food ships stopped arriving [then] they spread rumours we would be bombed, then they turned on our dogs."

In the early 1960s, the Labour government of Harold Wilson secretly agreed to a demand from Washington that the Chagos archipelago, a British colony, be "swept" and "sanitised" of its 2,500 inhabitants so that a military base could be built on the principal island, Diego Garcia. "They knew we were inseparable from our pets," said Lizette, "When the American soldiers arrived to build the base, they backed their big trucks against the brick shed where we prepared the coconuts; hundreds of our dogs had been rounded up and imprisoned there. Then they gassed them through tubes from the trucks' exhausts. You could hear them crying."
----
Remember the tear-stained headlines when Brand Obama was elected: "momentous, spine-tingling": the Guardian. "The American future," wrote Simon Schama, "is all vision, numinous, unformed, light-headed ..." The San Francisco Chronicle's columnist saw a spiritual "lightworker [who can] usher in a new way of being on the planet". Beyond the drivel, as the great whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg had predicted, a military coup was taking place in Washington, and Obama was their man. Having seduced the anti-war movement into virtual silence, he has given America's corrupt military officer class unprecedented powers of state and engagement. These include the prospect of wars in Africa and opportunities for provocations against China, America's largest creditor and new "enemy" in Asia. Under Obama, the old source of official paranoia Russia, has been encircled with ballistic missiles and the Russian opposition infiltrated. Military and CIA assassination teams have been assigned to 120 countries; long planned attacks on Syria and Iran beckon a world war. Israel, the exemplar of US violence and lawlessness by proxy, has just received its annual pocket money of $3bn together with Obama's permission to steal more Palestinian land.

http://johnpilger.com/articles/the-world-war-on-democracy?su
24 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
The world war on democracy [View all] sad sally Jan 2012 OP
Guess the US studied the Final Solution atreides1 Jan 2012 #1
if people get in their way... awoke_in_2003 Jan 2012 #22
"long planned attacks on Syria and Iran beckon a world war" tabatha Jan 2012 #2
The neo-cons would disagree with you. Who are you referring to? nm rhett o rick Jan 2012 #5
see #5 tabatha Jan 2012 #7
I've been roundly reminded here that the US always has a plan for war - anywhere, anytime sad sally Jan 2012 #10
Of course they do. tabatha Jan 2012 #17
That is delusuional Pentagon marketing babble. bemildred Jan 2012 #20
This marketing babble is sucking America dry; while delusuional, it has shaped democracy sad sally Jan 2012 #21
That is what marketing babble is for, to suck money. nt bemildred Jan 2012 #23
Democracy and capitalism can not co-exist. The capitalists have the power rhett o rick Jan 2012 #3
"Only when you take direct action, face to face, even break laws, are you ever noticed," sad sally Jan 2012 #4
The president refused to fix the problem of arrest and detention of American rhett o rick Jan 2012 #11
I'm inclined not to join clubs that would have me as a member, but I know what side I'll be on. sad sally Jan 2012 #14
I agree with you. nm rhett o rick Jan 2012 #19
Bush CIA director talks honestly about why attacking Iran is a bad idea tabatha Jan 2012 #5
And you know he "talks honestly" how? nm rhett o rick Jan 2012 #8
Yes. tabatha Jan 2012 #9
I dont believe that not being able to "win" a war is enough to keep us out of a war. rhett o rick Jan 2012 #13
That is some sick thinking. tabatha Jan 2012 #15
I hope you are right. nm rhett o rick Jan 2012 #18
There's a US commando team on standby - just in case. sad sally Jan 2012 #12
This is just in case Israel does something stupid. tabatha Jan 2012 #16
And where was this idiot when his boss was preparing to attack Iraq? Doctor_J Jan 2012 #24
Latest Discussions»Issue Forums»Editorials & Other Articles»The world war on democrac...»Reply #0