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Bowing Down to Our Own Violence

By Norman Solomon, AlterNet. Posted April 19, 2007.


News outlets in the U.S. combine the totally proper condemnation of killing at home with a notably different affect toward the methodical killing abroad that is funded by the U.S. Treasury.
Normon Solomon

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Several days after the mass killings at Virginia Tech, grisly stories about the tragedy still dominate front pages and cable television. News of carnage on a vastly larger scale -- the war in Iraq -- ebbs and flows. The overall coverage of lethal violence, at home and far away, reflects the chronic evasions of the American media establishment.

In the world of U.S. mainline journalism, the boilerplate legitimacy of official American violence overseas is a routine assumption.

"The first task of the occupation remains the first task of government: to establish a monopoly on violence," George Will wrote three years ago in the Washington Post. But now, his latest Newsweek column laments: "Vietnam produced an antiwar movement in America; Iraq has produced an antiwar America."

Current polls and public discourse -- in spite of media inclinations to tamp down authentic anger at the war -- do reflect an "antiwar America" of sorts. So, why is the ghastly war effort continuing unabated? A big factor is the undue respect that's reserved for American warriors in American society.

When a mentally unstable person goes on a shooting rampage in the United States, no one questions that such actions are intrinsically, fundamentally and absolutely wrong. The media condemnation is 100 percent.

However -- even after four years of a U.S. war in Iraq that has been increasingly deplored by the American public -- the standard violence directed from the Pentagon does not undergo much critical scrutiny from American journalists. The president's war policies may come under withering media fire, but the daily activities of the U.S. armed forces are subjected to scant moral condemnation. Yet, under orders from the top, they routinely continue to inflict -- or serve as a catalyst for -- violence far more extensive than the shooting sprees that turned a placid Virginia campus into a slaughterhouse.

News outlets in the United States combine the totally proper condemnation of killing at home with a notably different affect toward the methodical killing abroad that is funded by the U.S. Treasury. We often read, see and hear explicit media commendations that praise as heroic the Americans in uniform who are trying to kill, and to avoid being killed, in Afghanistan and Iraq.

In recent decades, the trends of war have been clear. A majority of the dead -- estimated at 75 to 90 percent -- are civilians. They are no less innocent than the more than 30 people who suddenly died from gunshots at Virginia Tech.

It would be inaccurate to say that the bulk of U.S. media's coverage accepts war launched from Washington. The media system of the USA does much more than accept -- it embraces the high-tech violence under the Pentagon's aegis. Key reasons are cultural, economic and political.

We grew up with -- and continue to see -- countless movies and TV programs showing how certain people with a handgun, a machine gun or missiles are able to set wrongs right with sufficiently deft and destructive violence.

The annual reports of large, medium and small companies boast that the U.S. Defense Department is a lucrative customer with more and more to spend on their wares for war.

And the scope of political discourse, reinforced by major news outlets, ordinarily remains narrow enough to dodge the huge differences between "defense spending" and "military spending." More broadly, the big media rarely explore the terrain of basic moral challenges to the warfare state.

Everyone who isn't deranged can agree that what happened on April 16, 2007, at the campus of Virginia Tech was an abomination. It came about because of an individual's madness. We must reject it without the slightest equivocation. And we do.

But the media baseline is to glorify the U.S. military -- yesterday, today and tomorrow -- bringing so much bloodshed to Iraq. The social dynamics in our own midst, fueling the war effort, are spared tough scrutiny. We're constantly encouraged to go along, avidly or passively.

Yet George Will has it wrong. The first task of government should not be "to establish a monopoly on violence." Government should work to prevent violence -- including its own.

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See more stories tagged with: war in iraq, violence

Norman Solomon is the author of the new book, "War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death."

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View:
Genocide
Posted by: ScottP on Apr 19, 2007 12:40 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group, as such:"

* (a) Killing members of the group;
* (b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
* (c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;
* (d) Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;
* (e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.

(definition from the United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide)

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Gilad Atzmon:
Posted by: rwa on Apr 19, 2007 3:01 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... in the days leading to the doomed illegal invasion of Iraq, the anti-war movement was extremely successful in mobilizing millions of people into protest. We saw them in every capital. They were calling Blair and Bush to withdraw their military plans. Millions of people questioned the sickening Anglo-American intelligence hoax. We could all see through the lies, we could all foresee the emerging crime, we were outraged, and we were convinced that we were doing the right thing. Yet, strangely enough, just four years later, with hundreds of thousands dead, with millions of casualties, with many millions of displaced people, when it is clear that everything went as wrong as it possibly could, when it is openly established that “the danger of Iraq’s WMDs” was nothing but a lie, not very many care about it all anymore. Now when the grim prophecy turns into reality of genocide with no end, we are collectively sinking into apathy. What are the logos behind this collective indifference, why did we lose interest? Why don’t we fight? Why aren’t we a mass movement?

I am not so sure whether I have the exact answers at my disposal, yet, I may be able to throw some light on the issue.

Cultural Clash

I am inclined to admit that the notion of Cultural Clash has indeed some deep meanings especially when it comes to the discourse of solidarity. Naturally, we tend to expect the subject of our solidarity to endorse our views while dumping his own. As much as Blair and Bush insist upon democratising the Muslim world, we, the so-called left humanists have our own various agendas for the region and its people. In Europe some archaic Marxists are convinced that ‘working class politics’ is the only viable outlook of the conflict and its solution. Some other deluded socialists and egalitarians are talking about liberating the Muslims of their religious traits. The cosmopolitans within the solidarity movement would suggest to Palestinians that nationalism and national identity belongs to the past. Noticeably, many of us love Muslim and Arabs as long as they act as white, post-enlightenment Europeans. In other words, we love Muslims as long as they stop being Muslims...
I would suggest that to support the other means to accept otherness, to accept that which you may never grasp. To accept otherness is to let in the unknown and the unfamiliar. To support Palestine is to back the Hamas and to support Iraq is to back the Iraqi resistance and liberation struggle. Simply speaking, to show solidarity is to support and accept other people and their will...

America has lost 3,000 of its sons and daughters in the Iraqi war. As much as I feel sorry for those who lost their beloved, for a superpower the size of America, such a scale of loss is nothing but a negligible casualty rate...

link

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» RE: Gilad Atzmon: Posted by: redbrownandblueparty
Collateral Damage?
Posted by: Michael Boldin on Apr 19, 2007 3:26 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's an absolute horror to me that both the media and the politicians in government continue to ignore the death and destruction in Iraq - which occurs on a daily basis.

While the politicians debate about funding, or when to have a non-binding date to maybe withdraw, thousands and thousands and thousands of innocent people are driven from their homes, maimed and murdered.

It's a feature that's consistent in all warfare. The politicians talk about these people as statistics - they're just collateral damage.

I can't think of a more disgusting phrase in our language - one that reduces human beings to little more than fat discarded by a butcher...

It's certainly an issue we need to keep in the forefront at all times.

That's my rant on the subject. A great essay, as always, by Mr. Solomon.

For some further discussion on this, read "Collateral Damage is Murder"

http://www.populistamerica.com/collateral_damage_is_murder

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Thanks.
Posted by: kepstein7777 on Apr 19, 2007 3:43 PM   
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Someone had to say it.

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» RE: Thanks. Posted by: liberalibrarian
Other Voices On Public War for Private Gain
Posted by: Hal on Apr 19, 2007 6:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
“All wars are fought for money.”
SOCRATES (Greek scholar and founder of western philosophy 470-399 BC)

“The ruling class has the schools and press under its thumb. This enables it to sway the emotions of the masses…
It is my conviction that killing under the cloak of war is nothing but an act of murder.”

DOCTOR ALBERT EINSTEIN (Nobel Laureate and refugee from Nazi fascism. 1879-1955)

“If tyranny and oppression come to this land, it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy.”
PRESIDENT JAMES MADISON (the 4th president as acknowledged “father” of the U.S. Constitution and founder of America on the abuse of power. 1751-1836)

“The end of democracy and the defeat of the American Revolution will occur when government falls into the hands of lending institutions and moneyed incorporations.”
PRESIDENT THOMAS JEFFERSON (a founder of America on cartel money power. 1743-1826)

“I have unwittingly ruined my country… we have come to be one of the worst ruled, one of the most completely controlled and dominated governments in the world. A government by the opinion and duress of a small group of dominant men.”
PRESIDENT WOODROW WILSON (on oligarch tyranny, three years after signing a “Federal Reserve Act” and its privately owned credit monopoly into law. Quote 1916)

“The real truth of the matter is, as you and I know, that a financial element in the larger centers has owned the government ever since the days of Andrew Jackson.”
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT (on oligarch rule in a letter to handler “Colonel” Edward M. House, confidence man for the cartel and founder of the Council on Foreign Relations. House also handled President Wilson in the foisting of a private and unconstitutional “Federal Reserve” Corporation sham with its IRS in 1913. FDR speaks of monopolists at cartel centers of New York & London that own the U.S. Government. November 21st, l933)

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Around the world........horror
Posted by: Captainmagic on Apr 20, 2007 2:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
condemnation, physical disbelief at the slaughter of innocents and the sheer enormity of the waste that has befallen the community of Virginia........Ummmm.... NO.. try IRAQ. Magnify the american pastime of shootings by one million and more then apply it to americas realtime presence among the worlds peoples....we do see who you really are but you do not. Was there ever a real american hero....I guess not...all smoke and bluff.....and vile lies. America is indeed at crossroads. Roads that beg the questions of righteousness and integrity...trust and virtue...where are you today and tommorow.....a vile nation of despicable levels of dishonesty that does not sit with where we the rest of the world see and wish to be a part of. This IS why you are regarded as the land of the GUN. That is why none of us are surprised in the least by the events at virginia tec.....it all goes hand in glove on trigger does it not? .....check your statistics....

33+ dead on a campus/hundreds of thousands smattered on the walls of ruination... Iraq. Hello America.

Captain OUT

P.S. All loss due to violence is tradgedy but the scales are tilted are they not. In the favour of the incompetents

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i was sickened by your president
Posted by: annm on Apr 20, 2007 3:32 AM   
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i was sickened by the shrub's comments on the virginia tech masacre that 'inocent' people were killed. that they all had loved ones etc.

apply the same comment to the hundreds of thousands of inocents you've killed in iraq, mr president.

peace

annm

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bowing down indeed
Posted by: jefhadist on Apr 20, 2007 6:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The U.S. says, "Don't do as I do...do as I say." But now it's obvious that "the chickens keep coming home to roost." Violence indeed begets violence in all it's myriad forms and the U.S. (and many of its citizens) are the masters at speaking out of both sides of their mouth at once (forked tongue as some would say). We are an almost totally schizo society. Unfortunately, "this world is ruled by violence" for the foreseeable future... until the day when we all get so sick and tired of it that we simply just quit. Millions are in the process of doing exactly that. That a change is necessary couldn't be much clearer unless it "smacked us upside the head". Or... gently caressed us into crying the unshed and accumulated tears of our collective wrongs. Forgiveness and reconciliation. Not such terribly difficult concepts to grasp. And they get easier with practice.

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» RE: bowing down indeed Posted by: talkville
But this isn't about me or anyone here
Posted by: VannaLaRoche on Apr 20, 2007 6:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When will ANYONE, on this board or anywhere else, give up their so-innocent love of Taxi Driver or Oz or The Sopranos or Mega-Death video game?

"Oh, it's not about me: I'm not violent.

"Sure, I watch CSI religiously, and I love to intone, "bada bing, bada boom," and think Tony Soprano is a guy like me--only bad.

"I'm good! I can watch these things and play these games and make the finger-pistol and talk about blowing things up, blowing things away--but I'm a good person so it's completely okay that I watch those things. Because my heart is pure, and I'm as innocent as Baby Sunshine.

"It's okay, really. I should be allowed complete access because I'm good--unlike other people who are bad and watch it. It has absolutely no effect on me at all, in any way; I'm completely as good a person before watching The Sopranos as I am after.

I'm good. I'm a good person. It's okay that I watch those things and buy those things. It's okay, really!"

"And believe me, if I held the gun, I'd know exactly who to shoot and everything would be much better."

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» already done it Posted by: brasilaron
amazingjim
Posted by: amazingjim on Apr 22, 2007 2:31 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
conversation peace

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Bowing Down to Our Own Violence
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