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Chimps in a Zoo Cage
February 20 2007
Counterbias.com
by Sheila Samples
"Journalism is
not a profession or a trade. It is a cheap catch-all for fuckoffs
and misfits - a false doorway to the backside of life, a filthy
piss-ridden little hole nailed off by the building inspector, but
just deep enough for a wino to curl up from the sidewalk and
masturbate like a chimp in a zoo-cage" –
Hunter S. Thompson,
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
If the
Bush administration and the US mainstream media are united on any one
issue, it's an absolute refusal to rock the political boat as they sail
mercilessly through the seas of corporate profit on the good ship
Terrorbush. For the most part, each group is an incurious lot –
undead
creatures who neither care, nor dare, to glance over the side of the
ship at the bloated, swirling bodies in the blood-red water below. From
the beginning, their mission has been to perform so fantastically
against a backdrop of such violent, explosive madness on so many fronts
that we watch hypnotically but do not see –
listen intently but do not
hear.
They are very good at what they do.
In the last
month or so, as dozens of Americans were killed in Iraq, we were
inundated with a variety of devastating news –
all of which literally
beg for broad, investigative reporting from those whom the late, great
Molly Ivins laughingly referred to as "alert guardian watchdogs of
democracy." For example...
-
A bleak National Intelligence Estimate
was released, which stated flatly that what is going on in Iraq is
much worse than a civil war and there is little chance that Bush's
escalation of 20,000-50,000 troops will do anything but fuel the fire.
The media's initial interest quickly faded when Vice President Dick
Cheney called the report "hogwash," and announced that he and Bush had
the power to do whatever they wanted, and neither the Congress nor the
people could stop them.
-
Bush appointed Adm. William Fallon to head Central Command (CENTCOM) –
a Navy man to run the ground wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Formerly
with NATO as Assistant Chief of Staff, Plans and Policy for Supreme
Allied Commander, Atlantic, Fallon has a
history of high-tech war game tomfoolery that provokes the enemy to
attack. With US carrier attack groups bumping into each other in the
Persian Gulf off the coast of Iran, who you gonna call?
-
Nat Hentoff writes in the
Village Voice that the giant aerospace Boeing is "supplying the CIA
with the planes to transport the shackled, blindfolded, drugged
passengers for interrogation in foreign torture chambers." Hentoff
credits The New Yorker's
Jane Meyer with
breaking the Boeing story in October, wherein she quoted a former
Jeppesen (Boeing subsidiary) employee who was told by a top official,
"We do all of the extraordinary rendition flights –
you know, the torture flights...It certainly pays well. [The CIA] spare
no expense. They have absolutely no worry about costs. What they have to
get done, they get done.”
-
The Pentagon's Inspector General (IG) Report confirms what we have
known for nearly five years –
we were catapulted into war with Iraq on
a pack of malicious, treasonous lies dreamed up by Under Secretary of
Defense for Policy Douglas Feith and Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul
Wolfowitz, who were obviously following Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld's order on 9-11 to "sweep it all up –
things related or not"
to justify an attack on Iraq.
-
In
testimony last week before the Senate Armed Services Committee,
Acting IG Thomas Gimble acknowledged, albeit in bewildering doublespeak,
that Feith's office had indeed "developed, produced and then
disseminated alternative intelligence assessments on the Iraq and
Al-Qaeda relationship, which included some conclusions that were
inconsistent with the consensus of the intelligence community, to senior
decision-makers." Gimble plowed on with an admission that Feith "was
inappropriately performing intelligence activities of developing,
producing and disseminating that should be performed by the intelligence
community."
-
Given that more than 600,000 Iraqi civilians have been slaughtered,
more than 2 million families are broken and displaced, and
3,379 coalition troops (3,123 of them Americans) have been blown to
bits, Gimble's limp concession that what these creatures did in
manipulating intelligence to go to war was neither "illegal or
unauthorized" is almost as bizarre as the media refusing to investigate
such criminal activity. Almost as bizarre as Wolfowitz' grinning
admission in Vanity Fair
two months after the attack, "We settled
on one issue, weapons of mass destruction, because it was the one reason
everyone could agree on." Almost as
bizarre as the American Enterprise Institute's Michael Ledeen, who
boasted in 2002, "we do not want stability in Iran, Iraq, Syria,
Lebanon, and even Saudi Arabia... the real issue is not whether, but
hot to destabilize."
-
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales suddenly fired seven US attorneys
and replaced them with Republican insiders. One of them, Tomothy
Griffin, who previously worked for Karl Rove and for the Republican
National Committee, will head to Arkansas –
just as the Hillary Clinton
presidential campaign heats up. San Diego prosecutor Carol Lam was
bounced for bringing California Republican Randy "Duke" Cunningham to
justice for taking $2.4 million in bribes. According to Salon's
Joe Conason, Lam
"is still pursuing important leads in that historic case. Cunningham
is supposed to be cooperating," Conason says, "but if Bush replaces her
(Lam) with a partisan stooge, he may be able to keep his secrets." In
his usual Cheshire manner, Gonzales admitted the resignations were
forced, but "declined to comment on details of the cases."
-
The old news surfaced briefly of the Pentagon loading 363 tons of $100
bills onto pallets and flying them aboard military planes to Iraq where
they were handed over to the Iraqi government with no accountability.
That's $4 billion, or 726,000 pounds of stash –
with an additional $8.8
billion that also disappeared about the time US "Viceroy" Paul Bremer
mounted up and headed for the border.
-
Then, there's the Scooter Libby Blame Plame Game trial wherein Libby
and a gaggle of journalists are wildly pointing fingers at each other in
a hilarious effort to cover their treasonous asses about who told whom
what and when –
while the noose tightens slowly around Dick Cheney's
neck. Great entertainment, but of course no in-depth research and
investigation into matters of consequence, such as what "dark side"
activity was going on at the highest levels in order to take us to war.
Personally, I never believe anything anybody called "Scooter" tells me –
unless his last name is Rizzuto.
You'd think that the mainstream media would bump into each other in
their haste to cover one or all of the above. But no. While C-Span alone
carried the interminably long Senate debate-about-the-debate on at least
three toothless, nonbinding resolutions addressing Bush's ongoing
ejaculation in Iraq –
while six US helicopters were brought down by
enemy fire –
while the Bush neocons were back at their old game of
manipulating intelligence to justify a war on Iran –
the silly,
somnolent scriveners chose instead to overdose on the "Air Pelosi"
scandal.
Reporters clambered aboard the Swift Boat with their Republican "unnamed
sources," and went full throttle at House Speaker Nancy Pelosi for
daring to request a plane large enough to fly from Washington to
California without refueling. The story quickly went from "Air Pelosi"
to "Pelosi One." It went from, "The new Speaker of the House is
apparently asking for a big travel upgrade" to "the San Francisco
Democrat is abusing the perks of power by attempting to commandeer a
fancy jumbo-size military jet with a 'distinguished visitor compartment
with sleep accommodations.'"
The reporters-cum-repeaters rounded out the jam-packed 10-day news
period either shouting that all destructive weapons in Iraq come from
Iran –
or curled up on the nation's sidewalks shrieking in ecstasy
about Anna Nicole Smith.
The U.S. media is beneath contempt, and can never redeem itself for the
damage it has wrought on this republic by its fawning allegiance to a
band of crooked, war-mongering fools. By sinking to reading
scrubbed-clean White House press releases, by relinquishing all
pretences of honesty, values and integrity in order to ingratiate itself
to the ravenous corporate beast, its members are little more than
"enablers" who cannot remember why they became journalists in the first
place.
W.C. Fields once said, "There comes a time in the affairs of man when he
must take the bull by the tail and face the situation." That time is
now. Molly Ivins was right –
it's time we hit the streets, beating on
pots and pans and take our country back. Our first stop should be at the
source of our country's problems –
the shallow and destructive
corporate media.
==
Sheila Samples is an
Oklahoma writer and a former civilian US Army Public Information
Officer. She is a regular contributor for a variety of Internet sites.
Contact her at
rsamples@sirinet.net.
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