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Six Years of 9/11 as a License to Kill

By Norman Solomon, AlterNet. Posted September 10, 2007.


Thanks to the military-industrial -media complex, Americans view humanity through red-white -and-blue windows on the world.
Normon Solomon

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Also by Norman Solomon

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Obama's Tuesday win represents a victory over a press corps fixated on fluff over substance.
May 7, 2008

Let's Party Like It’s 1932
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NPR: National Pentagon Radio?
When even public radio parrots the military's official line on the war in Iraq, what hope is there for unbiased, quality reporting?
Mar 27, 2008

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It evokes a tragedy that marks an epoch. From the outset, the warfare state has exploited "9/11," a label at once too facile and too laden with historic weight -- giving further power to the tacit political axiom that perception is reality.

Often it seems that media coverage is all about perception, especially when the underlying agendas are wired into huge profits and geopolitical leverage. If you associate a Big Mac or a Whopper with a happy meal or some other kind of great time, you're more likely to buy it. If you connect 9/11 with a need for taking military action and curtailing civil liberties, you're more likely to buy what the purveyors of war and authoritarian government have been selling for the past half-dozen years.

"Sept. 11 changed everything" became a sudden cliche in news media. Words are supposed to mean something, and those words were -- and are -- preposterous. They speak of a USA enthralled with itself while reducing the rest of the world (its oceans and valleys and mountains and peoples) to little more than an extensive mirror to help us reflect on our centrality to the world. In an individual, we call that narcissism. In the nexus of media and politics, all too often, it's called "patriotism."

What happened on Sept. 11, 2001, was extraordinary and horrible by any measure. And certainly a crime against humanity. At the same time, it was a grisly addition to a history of human experience that has often included many thousands killed, en masse, by inhuman human choice.

It is simply and complexly a factual matter that the U.S. government has participated in outright mass murders directly -- in, for example, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Panama, Yugoslavia, Afghanistan, Iraq -- and less directly, through aid to armies terrorizing civilians in Nicaragua, Angola, East Timor and many other countries.

The news media claim to be providing context. But whose? Overall, the context of Uncle Sam in the more perverse and narcissistic aspects of his policy personality. The hypocrisies of claims about moral precepts and universal principles go beyond the mere insistence that some others "do as we say, not as we do." What gets said, repeated and forgotten sets up kaleidoscope patterns that can be adjusted to serve the self-centered mega-institutions reliably fixated on maintaining their own dominance.

Media manifestations of these patterns are frequently a mess of contradictions so extreme that they can only be held together with the power of ownership, advertising and underwriting structures -- along with notable assists from government agencies that dispense regulatory favors and myriad pressure to serve what might today be called a military-industrial-media complex. Our contact with the world is filtered through the mesh of mass media to such a great extent that the mesh itself becomes the fabric of power.

The most repetitious lessons of 9/11 -- received and propagated by the vast preponderance of U.S. news media -- have to do with the terribly asymmetrical importance of grief and of moral responsibility. Our nation is so righteous that we are trained to ask for whom the bell tolls. Rendered as implicitly divisible, humanity is fractionated as seen through red-white-and-blue windows on the world.

Posing outside cycles of violence and victims who victimize, the dominant vision of Pax Americana has no more use now than it did six years ago for W.H. Auden's observation: "Those to whom evil is done / Do evil in return."

We ought to know. But we Americans are too smart for that.

The U.S. media tell us so.

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See more stories tagged with: media, war on iraq, 9/11

Norman Solomon’s new book "Made Love, Got War: Close Encounters with America’s Warfare State" has just come off the press. For more information, go to the the Web site.

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The Most Brutal “Lesson” of 911 is of Cover-up and Criminal Deception
Posted by: Aramis on Sep 10, 2007 6:33 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That lesson is completely missing from this good but very incomplete story by Norman Solomon.

911 is certainly the biggest and most treacherous cover-up operation for the deployment of global criminal war since before Tonkin Gulf for Viet Nam.

“War on terror” is as vicious a lie as the event of 911 itself.

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Petraeus is tying the albatross around the neck of liberty
Posted by: KaptainSpiffy on Sep 11, 2007 3:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
if you were a war profiteer, like the bush/cheney crew, wouldn't you be smiling while he testified that we needed to stay the course before congress yesterday? the us economy is gone already. welcome the amero and the new world order! yay!

*reflexively huddles under desk for protection*

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The real tragedy of 9/11...
Posted by: polyquat50 on Sep 11, 2007 3:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
is that it changed nothing at all.

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War is a private enterprise
Posted by: shangrilalad on Sep 11, 2007 4:27 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
War is a private enterprise

The owners of America’s monopoly media, and Rupert Murdoch in particular have brainwashed, betrayed and corrupted the people to the point that many can no longer distinguish between good and evil. Wrapping themselves in the flag and religion, Republicans have bombed and invaded two Arab countries rich in natural resources. Opium, heroin and oil are extremely lucrative cash crops. The war profiteers plan to invade Iran and Syria not to protect our oil supplies, but to allow corporate fascists to steal it. Everyone knows that, and yet many Americans are indifferent to the death and destruction our leaders (representatives) in both parties have unleashed on the world.

As long as war remains the most profitable private enterprise know to man, peace loving people will have their backs to the wall. The warmongers and profiteers sheep-dip our people in fear, lies and hate, 24/7. No one likes to admit they are brainwashed, but surely enough of us now recognize that this is the case. That boob-tube in your living room is a dispenser of lies, fear, hate and evil. And newspapers are no better.

Contrary to what millions of Americans think, war is no longer about national defense, it’s become a private enterprise owned and operated by obscenely rich plutocrats. We never meet these people because they live behind walls of government corrupting wealth and power. They hold the power of life and death for millions of people in their hands, while we stand shocked and awed.

Can we also no longer distinguish between truth and lies?

Why do we submit to this insanity and evil?

.

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» RE: War is a private enterprise Posted by: Constitutionalist75
This comment has been removed from the site due to non-compliance with AlterNet's community policies.
Bravo, bravo
Posted by: Nedtheredhead on Sep 11, 2007 4:38 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
An excellent piece Norman. We need to see more of the same.
Today the conservative Canadian Prime Minister addressed a joint sitting of both houses of our Australian Parliament. There weren't any invasive CNN, or similar TV cameras, roughshooting it over our media. There weren't body guards preventing our population from sitting in the viewers gallery, or coming within 10 mile of our Parliamentary building. There weren't any road blocks, protective barriers, airspace restrictions, or hundreds of Hummers in a motorcade with idiots talking into their sleeves. It was an example of how respectful one country's leader can be to another's. His speech was warmly greeted, not only by a standing ovation from all Politicians present, but also by all visitors to the public gallery, which was packed to overflowing. Unlike Canada's Prime Minister Harper's speech to our Parliament, your excuse for a leader was responsible for all of those previously mentioned restrictions and limitations when he visited here last weekend, and a couple of years ago when he also addressed our Parliament.
The difference, on one hand we had a humble man courteously and respectfully addressing Australia as a representative of his people, and on the other, an arrogant ignoramus who couldn't even get our PM's name right (at one time he called him PM Michael Howard) and who acted more like a Roman Centurion overseeing his conquest than a visitor to an independent nation.
And to top that off, tonight's news in Canada ran the entire speech of their PM's address to our Parliament, while the best American media could do on George's visit was a few sound bites of inconsequential ravings of a madman who didn't know what country he was in.... Australia or Austria.

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» Bravo, bravo . . . except Posted by: Knowmad
» RE: Bravo, bravo . . . except Posted by: Nedtheredhead
» RE: Bravo, bravo Posted by: BitcoDavid
» RE: Bravo, bravo Posted by: Nedtheredhead
» RE: Bravo, bravo Posted by: MindyB
» Hate to say it, but..... Posted by: mjabele
» RE: Bravo, bravo Posted by: Fiorenzo
» RE: Bravo, bravo Posted by: Nedtheredhead
» RE: Bravo, bravo Posted by: Fiorenzo
» RE: Bravo, bravo Posted by: Nedtheredhead
» RE: Bravo, bravo Posted by: Fiorenzo
» RE: Bravo, bravo Posted by: Nedtheredhead
» RE: Bravo, bravo Posted by: Nedtheredhead
» RE: Bravo, bravo Posted by: MindyB
» RE: Bravo, bravo Posted by: Nedtheredhead
"Admit that the waters around you have grown"
Posted by: hagwind on Sep 11, 2007 6:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
9/11 only "changed everything" for people who thought bad shit couldn't possibly happen to them. This does not include most of the world, or even most USians, though six years of relentless repetition of The Mantra have probably persuaded some of us otherwise. Women and people of color and anyone who isn't rich enough to be shielded from economic realities know that bad shit can, and not infrequently does, happen to us. The people who died in the Fall of the Towers are no more or less dead than people who die in a mine collapse. The big difference is that the people who think they're immune to bad shit can't even imagine having to work down in a mine or live in a neighborhood where there's a gang war on; they can, however, and very easily too, imagine working in places like the Pentagon and the World Trade Center. So 9/11 freaked them out big-time. It also freaked out all the USians who thought that bombs were something we drop on other people, not something that someone else could possibly drop on us.

In significant ways, 9/11 was like the arrival of AIDS. Like 9/11, AIDS hit a lot of people -- relatively young, class-privileged white gay men -- who thought they were immortal. None of us are immortal. Bad shit can happen to anybody. AIDS and 9/11 were cruel teachers, but the lessons are still worth learning.

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Progressive?
Posted by: Knowmad on Sep 11, 2007 6:47 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As for this article, I'll just repeat myself here, again: Pretty well written and thought out, but once more limited to yet another analysis of the crimes and abuse, with no mention of possible solutions, or even potential alternatives. It's not that difficult to examine circumstances and state your findings and views (besides which, Solomon's preaching to the choir here). But awareness is only a step, not an end in itself, and it's a whole different game to try to correct mistakes and fix problems.

And be aware, filth like cheney and pals are playing this game with everything they've got. Meanwhile, noted American - and other - progressives and their friends/fans sit back and analyse, and opine and intellectualize, and then do or suggest nothing to deal with the sad conclusions they've so meticulously documented.

Doesn't really seem all that progressive, now does it?
~

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» RE: Progressive? Posted by: shangrilalad
» RE: Progressive? Posted by: Constitutionalist75
» RE: Progressive? Posted by: johngary
» RE: Progressive? Posted by: hagwind
» RE: Progressive? Posted by: Nedtheredhead
» RE: Progressive? Posted by: nellie blogger
shangrilalad
Posted by: DesertStone on Sep 11, 2007 7:08 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Wrapping themselves in the flag and religion, Republicans have bombed and invaded two Arab countries rich in natural resources. Opium, heroin and oil are extremely lucrative cash crops."


You might be interested to know that Afghanistan is not an Arab country. The entire Middle East is not Arab and your lack of knowledge or unwillingness to acknowledge a fact will not make it so.

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Say, What?
Posted by: shangrilalad on Sep 11, 2007 7:20 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
.
Please insert Islamic countries where I said Arab countries, but what has that do with Opium, heroin and oil?

.

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never ending war
Posted by: american on Sep 11, 2007 7:36 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you look at the history, the US has been in wars and conflicts continuously since its founding and their viciousness has increased hand in hand with the country's capacity to kill.

Both small and large wars protect "American interests," but it is the big wars that really juice the military industrial complex's owners. These owners, by the way, own the media and the military industries. One hand has reached out and shaken the other, and vise-versa, since this country's founding. All of this has been fueled by money, myths, power, patriotism, and propaganda.

This one-hand-shaking-the-other is evident in the feigned opposition of the power democrats and republicans on matters of core social philosophy - one that is financial-elite centered. They are just a few degrees off from one another in philosophy; yet they use rhetoric to appear to make the difference seem greater. Look at what they do, not at what they say.

The US jumps at the slightest provocation to a threat to its "interests." If they are not present, it, along with the media, create indefinable ones such as:

The War on Communism (which controlled the middle and underclass and fueled the military industry. By the way, communism was at variance with capitalism, not democracy, but was framed in the US as a force against freedom, which, of course, is more clearly associated with democracy than capitalism.)

The War on Drugs (which controls the middle and underclass, and creates a cut for large segments of the US plutocracy via laundering and other activities)

The War on Terror (which controls the middle and underclass, fuels the military industry, and seizes middle eastern countries’ oil and heroin assets)

The power media can report and portray things the way they have been because their owners own everything else. If newspapers are down, armaments are up. The lower wealth groups still have to pay the proverbial “rent.” They cannot shake free of this without control of the dialogue, e.g., democracy. They cannot shake free of this without some control of the means of production, e.g., fair, unrigged, economic policies and the time to grow, make and repair their own things.

In the past, this state of affairs was more controllable by the plutocracy. Now however, prevalent technology requires grand scale education. In response, the plutocracy has made education more like training. Training creates automatons for the automation. Education creates thinking people who are well-rounded individuals who can be creative and make up their own minds.

"Principles," and all other notions or ideas, quaint or logical, are things that, in the minds of the power "elite," are used to quell people.

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» RE: never ending war Posted by: johngary
The total propaganda mindset of the Bush Administration...
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Sep 11, 2007 8:50 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why was Petraeus sent to Congress on Sept 10 and 11? The only reason was to continue to link the war in Iraq to the attacks of 9/11. This is a PR method that relies on The Association Principle.

"Principle: I mentally connect things together, and then automatically follow the links I have made....If I can control how you associate, I can lead you in any direction I choose."

There are many shady issues surrounding 9/11 and the post 9/11 anthrax attacks, such as: multiple advance warnings about upcoming hijackings, failure of Bush to warn the airlines, bizarre behavior of the military on the day of 9/11, the high-tech nature of the anthrax spore preparations sent through the mail, the fact that it was a U.S. military strain of anthrax that was used, all followed by a massive cover-up campaign involving everyone from the FBI to Battelle Memorial Institute (makers of the US vaccine and big beneficiaries of Project Bioshield), etc.

However, the shadiest issue of all is how the events of 9/11 were deliberately used to justify an invasion of Iraq that has killed well over 3,000 US soldiers, maimed tens of thousands more, resulted in the death of at least half a million Iraqis, and turned several million more into homeless refugees, and which has also created a gigantic political mess in the Middle East which has brought the entire region to the brink of nuclear warfare. Israel has over 400 nukes, including thermonukes, and Pakistan has nukes, and now everyone in the region wants their own nuclear arsenal in order to prevent themselves from being invaded.

The only people who have benefited are the multinational oil, arms and engineering corps - the same entities that control the US propaganda system, i.e. the US corporate press, and the ones who put Bush in power as well.

As just one example of the power of the US propaganda system, notice how thoroughly the anthrax attacks have been buried, when in reality they kept the terror-fear level in the general US population ramped up for months following 9/11 - and yet noone talks about it any more - neither the left or the right.

Welcome to the Propaganda Nation:

...in order to achieve absolute control, they need to have control of the military, the media and education.

Military:...using military might is not a good solution. When coerced, you will get control of hands, but not hearts or minds. Rebellion is always in the air and the dictator will always go in fear of his or her life.
Media:When you control the media, you can control the messages that are put in front of people day in and day out. If all that people see is a consistent message, then they will eventually come to believe it.
The internet has caused problems for dictators here...
Education:When you control the education system, you can instill values and beliefs from a very young age, particularly if you can move them from any contrary family environment into a consistent and controlled system.... Values that are instilled when young may disappear for a while during teenage years, but almost always creep back again afterwards.

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USA! USA!
Posted by: eddie torres on Sep 11, 2007 9:05 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
500,000 annual US deaths from tobacco use and smoking... where's the War on South Carolina?

25,000 annual US deaths from drunk drivers... where's the War on Detroit and Lynchburg, Tennessee?

16,000 annual US deaths from homicide... where's the War on the NRA and Ted Nugent?

That's 3,108,000 dead on US soil in the 6 years since 9/11.

Face it: Americans are far more productive at killing each other than foreigners ever have been.

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» RE: USA! USA! Posted by: DaBear
» RE: USA! USA! Posted by: hagwind
Government Hypocrisy
Posted by: johngary on Sep 11, 2007 1:18 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Every time we turn around the Government is selling us its hypocrisy, but none greater than the 9/11 call to arms.
Every year 500,000 American die from cigarette related illnesses.
Every week almost ten thousand American’s die from cigarette related illnesses.
Every week more than three times the number killed on 9/11 die from cigarette related illnesses, every single week, week after week after week.
My father and my most beloved aunt died from lung cancer caused by cigarette smoking.
This incredible death toll continues year after year. And our government could care less about these countless millions of American who have died for corporate greed.
But suddenly we must give up our Civil Rights, suspend the constitutional right of Habeas Corpus, lose our rights of privacy, allow our mail to be opened and read, allow the government to kick down our door in the middle of the night and hold us incommunicado indefinitely, send our boys and girls to war, go in debt for over a trillion dollars, forget about our infrastructure, abandon our needy seniors (the Bush administration suspended giving one box of food a month to the impoverished seniors–no money available!), stop the breakfast program for impoverished children etc.. etc..etc.
All because three thousand died on 9/11!
This total lack of proportionality, tells us volumes about their real intentions!
If they don’t care about millions and millions of their citizens dying they obviously could care less about the three thousand dead. Their blatant misuse of these poor 9/11 innocents is SHAMEFUL. Hypocrisy has reached new heights.

Freedom lovers awake, the Reichstadt is burning, and the neoNazi’s are among us.

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5
Posted by: kepstein7777 on Sep 11, 2007 3:22 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Awesome article. One of the best I've seen on Alternet or any other site. Paragraph 3 by itself speaks a million volumes about our national character.

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Mirror Image
Posted by: gradioc on Sep 11, 2007 6:06 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Lately it occurs to me that George W. Bush and Osama Bin Laden have found in each other the perfect partner for each man's mad quest for power. Both desperately need an outside evil to rally support and persuade people to surrender their will to the leader.Osama seeks to reestablish the Caliphate, at least over all Arabs, and potentially throughout Islam, an empire that would strech from Gibralter to the shores of Australia.Bush seeks to fundamentally change the system of government that our founders set up and replace it with one that they envisioned, reviled, and did their best to guard against with the careful checks and balances they put on the executive.I love the way neocons mouth the sounds of adherence to a strict and literal interpretation of the Constitution while actually doing their damn best to destroy the limits on executive power that form its backbone. There is no reading of that document under which the "Unitary Executive Theory" can pass the laugh test.Both Bin Laden and Bush need for the gullible to accept that only by acceding to their demands for more and more power can the evil monster on the other side of the glass be vanquished.Bush needs Bin Laden. I've never taken seriously the 9/11 conspiracy theories (and, to be frank, some of those people scare the Hell out of me), but I'm beginning to wonder if Tora Bora was a screw-up or an intentional opening of the back door.

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a catalyst
Posted by: unity1 on Sep 12, 2007 12:19 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
9/11 - whether it was an inside job as all evidence points to or just traitorus incompetence - was a catalystic moment for not just the US but as the dust settled, the citizens of the entire world started to realize just how much veneer had gone into the illusion of Americas pretense at its nice guy image - the truth of its murderous forgien policy has been stripped bare thanks in part to Bush's - why do they hate us rhetoric -the truth of course has been well known outside the US

The ugly american has been well known outside its boarders and while most are content to feast off their god of war, or star gaze at idols made of tinsel the American government has been censoring any news that might give away its real secret missions of undermining democratically elected government, supporting terrorism when it helped them set up and stifile opposition to corporate theft of land and resources - the people of the US remain ignorant - unbelieving even today of what their government is doing and has done to the rest of the world -

its sad to realise that out of the 300 million that reside in the US half of them are so locked into the illusion that their government can do no wrong - that its almost a sick joke - the world watches in horror at what the american government is doing in the Middle EAst and everyone knows its about oil, about control and domination and everyone is starting to wake up to the reality that the US is by far the most evil nation upon the face of the earth and has a history to prove it, a history that outshines any other country by a long shot

Its appropriate then that american citizens find themselves loosing freedoms - its appropriate that american citizens find themselves under threat of fascism - its not surprising to the rest of us - and those of us outside the US are begining to see how far the unstatiable bloodlust and belief in power, control and domination can influence our own governments - the bully of the global playground is a threat to all of us

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» RE: a catalyst Posted by: cottontail
» RE: a catalyst Posted by: MindyB
» Corporate/Government Experiment? Posted by: Corruptionisagameofego
Trust
Posted by: donl51 on Sep 12, 2007 1:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've read every post and comment on this topic and what I got out of its total message is one big thing...We absolutely do not trust our goverment at all in any sense of the word ! I personally believe this admin.knew a whole lot more of what went down on 9/11 than anyone can imagine,but then I personally do not trust our goverments,.I learned that by being in the Vietnam war .......'',and those swiftboat cruds against Kerry can kiss my ass!.''....that last part was an adendum!!!!

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» RE: Trust Posted by: MindyB
This Author git it just right!
Posted by: MindyB on Sep 14, 2007 7:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is a great article! Perfectly pintointing the ugly truth of this country and its war/media mongers.

Now if only our elected representatives could read and actually understand what this author so eloquently wrote, that would be an incredible miracle!

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PROPOSE 2008 AS A "YEAR OF SHAME" FOR US
Posted by: drricklippin on Sep 16, 2007 3:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Many of us have so many emotions surrounding the Bush administration's immorality.

Mine is mostly SHAME at this point for-

- continuing an immoral war
- re-distribution of wealth to the very rich
- attack on the US constitutional freedoms
- failure to have ethical US regulatory agencies
- failure to act on health care- even for kids!
- many more(TPM readers- add please)

I am proposing that 2008 be declared "the year of America's shame" so that we can at least demonstrate to the rest of the world our deep level of how shameful it is to be an American under Bush and his immoral cronies and sycophants

We need a logo and a color -suggestions please

We will wear it.

As pennance we will elect an honorable person to become our next president if we can find one?

Please join me. Visibly show your shame in 2008.

Thank you so much

Be Well,

Dr. Rick Lippin
Southampton,Pa
http://medicalcrises.blogspot.com

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