The Revolution Was Not Televised
By William Rivers Pitt
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
There was a large anti-war rally in Washington last week.
The standard slogans were on display for all to see: Impeach Bush, Bring
The Troops Home, No Blood For Oil. On the periphery of the protest
stood a few dozen 'patriots' holding a counter-demonstration in support
of Bush and the Iraq war. Among the signs carried by this crew was
a banner that succinctly summed up the madness of the age, and the
dangerous nature of the current ruling class.
Across the top of the banner, which was clearly
professionally made and not hand-lettered, were the block-letter words
"SUPPORT PRESIDENT BUSH." Through the center of the
banner were black outlines of a fighter aircraft, a tank, an M-16 rifle,
a .45 caliber pistol, an attack helicopter, a surface-to-air missile
battery, and a thermonuclear bomb. Underneath these images were
two more block-letter words: "TRUST JESUS."
The sentiment apparently finds resonance with Senator
Trent Lott, Republican of Mississippi. The Wednesday edition of
The Hill carried a story about GOP concerns over the manner in which the
post-war war is unfolding. The trepidation is understandable; more
American troops have been killed in the 'Mission Accomplished' phase of
the war than in the war itself. Lott responded to the crisis in
Iraq by saying, "If we have to, we just mow the whole place down,
see what happens."
The Bush administration has tried to frame their wars as
not being a religiously-based crusade against the Islamic world.
This has been a hard-sell with Muslims, especially since Bush used the
word "crusade" immediately after September 11. Norman
Podhoretz, one of the ideological fathers of the cadre of hawks
currently running our foreign policy, publicly described our conflict in
the Mideast as being a process aimed at bringing about "the
reformation and modernization of Islam." The religious
overtones are difficult to miss.
Perhaps the best example of where we stand today comes in
the guise of Lt. General William Boykin, deputy undersecretary for
defense, who is charged with finding important enemies like Osama bin
Laden. Boykin, when not smoking 'em out of their holes, has been
touring the fundamentalist pulpits across the America. Describing
the hunt for a Somali warlord last January, Boykin said, "I knew
that my God was bigger than his. I knew that my God was a real God and
his was an idol."
Boykin has held forth on the true meaning of the War on
Terror. "Satan wants to destroy this nation," says
Boykin, "he wants to destroy us as a nation, and he wants to
destroy us as a Christian army." In June of 2002, Boykin held
up a photograph of Mogadishu to a church congregation. The photo
carried the image of a dark spot in the sky above the city.
"Ladies and gentlemen," Boykin said, "this is your enemy.
It is the principalities of darkness. It is a demonic presence in
that city that God revealed to me as the enemy."
The banner carried by the 'patriot' in Washington should
have had the black outline of an oil well alongside all those weapons.
Trusting Jesus has been a lucrative business for some. The Center
for Public Integrity released a report on Thursday which details how $8
billion in contracts to 'rebuild' Iraq and Afghanistan have gone
exclusively to companies which donated piles of money to Bush's 2000
election campaign. These contracts were awarded without the usual
bidding process; few beyond the friends of Bush were given the
opportunity to cash in on the war.
Most prominent on the list of companies awarded these
contacts is Halliburton, the oil company recently run by Vice President
Dick Cheney. Halliburton subsidiary, Kellog Brown & Root, has
gathered to itself a tidy $2.3 billion contract to repair Iraq's oil
industry. The price tag for this project was doubled recently by
the Bush administration so Halliburton could get a larger share of the
$87 billion allocated for Iraq. The reason for the doubling?
Halliburton plans to go beyond repairing old oil wells and develop new
wells to tap virgin supplies of oil and gas.
Islam is not the only religion to have a militant,
fundamentalist Taliban wing making up part of the whole. In
America, the Taliban wing of Christianity has assumed power. The
banner at that 'patriot' rally captures the essence of these frightening
extremists: Supporting Bush is placed on the same level as worshipping
Jesus, and shot through the middle is the steel fist of weapons and war.
September 11 has been refashioned by the Christian Taliban as a rallying
cry for an end-times death match against Islam, a rallying cry that
obscures the orgasm of profiteering that is taking place behind the
scenes.
There has been a religiously fundamentalist revolution in
the United States. The extremists have taken control of the White
House, Congress, the courts, and the military. You did not see
this on NBC, ABC, CBS, CNN, MSNBC, CNBC or Fox, but it happened all the
same.
This article was originally published in www.truthout.org
U.S. Contractors Reap the Windfalls of Postwar Reconstruction Center
for Public Integrity http://www.publicintegrity.org/wow/
Photograph provided by prolesunited:
http://homepage.mac.com/prolesunited/PhotoAlbum51.html
William Rivers Pitt
is the Managing Editor of truthout.org. He is a New York Times and
international best-selling author of three books - "War
On Iraq," available from Context Books, "The
Greatest Sedition is Silence," available from Pluto Press, and
"Our
Flag, Too: The Paradox of Patriotism," available in August from
Context Books.