February 22, 2010
By Paul Craig Roberts
The government and its propaganda ministry do not want to call Stack a terrorist. "Terrorist" is a term the government reserves for Muslims who do not like what Israel does to Palestinians and the U.S. government does to Muslim countries.
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Joseph Stack, frustrated American, flew his airplane into an Austin, Texas,
office building. He was one of the 79-percent of Americans who have given up on
"their" government.
The latest Rasmussen Poll indicates that the vast
majority of Americans are convinced that "their" government is totally
unresponsive to them, their concerns, and their needs. Rasmussen found that only
21-percent of the American population agree that the U.S. government has the
consent of the governed, and that 21-percent is comprised of the political class
itself and liberals. Rasmussen concludes that the gap between the American
population and the politicians who rule them "may be as big today as the gap
between the colonies and England during the 18th century."
Indications
are that Joseph Stack was sane. Like Palestinians faced with Israeli jet
fighters, helicopter gunships, tanks, missiles and poison gas, Stack realized
that he was powerless. A suicide attack was the only weapon left to
him.
Stack targeted the IRS, the federal agency that had gratuitously
ruined him. He flew his airplane into an office building occupied by 200 members
of the IRS. This deliberate plan and the written explanation he left behind
segregate him from deranged people who randomly shoot up a Post Office or
university campus.
The government and its propaganda ministry do not want
to call Stack a terrorist. "Terrorist" is a term the government reserves for
Muslims who do not like what Israel does to Palestinians and the U.S. government
does to Muslim countries.
But Stack experienced the same frustrations
and emotions as Muslims who can't take it any longer and strap on a suicide
vest.
"Violence," Stack wrote, "not only is the answer, it is the only
answer." Stack concluded that nothing short of violence will get the attention
of a government that has turned its back on the American people.
Anger is
building up. People are beginning to do unusual things. Terry Hoskins bulldozed
his house rather than allow a bank to foreclose on it. The local TV station
conducted an online survey and found that 79 percent of respondents agreed with
Hoskins' action.
Perhaps the turning point was the federal government's
bailout of the investment banks whose reckless misbehavior diminished Americans'
retirement savings for the second time in eight years. Now a former head of the
most culpable bank is campaigning to cut Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid
benefits in order to pay for the bailout. President Obama has obliged him by
creating a "deficit commission."
The "deficit commission" will be used
to gut Social Security, just as the private insurance health plan is paid for by
cutting $500 billion out of Medicare.
It could not be more clear that
government represents the interest groups that finance the election
campaigns.
Conservatives used to say that Washington's power should be
curtailed in behalf of state and local governments that are "closer to the
people." But of course state and local governments are also controlled by
interest groups.
Consider Florida, for example. In 2004 the storm surge
from Hurricane Ivan did considerable damage to the Gulf Coast of the Florida
panhandle. At Inlet Beach in Walton County, the surge claimed two beachfront
homes and washed away enough of the high ground as to leave other homes
vulnerable to the next storm.
People wanted to armor their homes with
some form of sea wall. When the county gave the go ahead, two houses on the West
end hired engineers who constructed a barrier made of rows of tubes 60 feet long
filled with sand, each weighing about 70 tons. The sand-colored tubes were
buried under many tons of white sand trucked in, and sea oats were planted. It
was a perfect solution, and an expensive one -- $250,000.
Just East of the
two homes, Ivan washed away a section of beach front road and left three houses
built on pilings sitting on the beach. Last year government with FEMA money
rebuilt the section of washed away beachfront road and armored it and two
adjacent houses. The government used interlocking iron or steel panels that it
drove down into the sand, leaving six to seven feet of the rusty metal above
ground. Hundreds of truck loads of sand were brought in to cover the unsightly
sea wall.
It didn't require a storm to wash away the loose sand and
leave the ugly rusty metal exposed on the beach. The first high tide did the
trick. Residents and vacationers are left with an eyesore on a beach ranked as
the third most beautiful in the world.
The ugly rusty barrier built by
the government is still there. But the intelligent approach taken by the
private homeowners has been condemned to death. As I write, heavy equipment is
on the beach slashing open the tubes and piling up the sand to be carried away.
The homes will be left standing on the edge and will be undermined by the next
hurricane.
Why did this happen? The official reason given by Florida's
Department of Environmental Policy is that the county could only issue a
temporary permit. Only DEP can issue a permanent permit, and as the homeowners
don't have DEP's permanent permit, out goes the expensive, carefully engineered
and unobtrusive sea wall.
This is the way government "works" for ordinary
citizens. For the vast majority of people, government exists as a persecution
mechanism that takes great pleasure in ruining their lives and pocketbooks. The
DEP has inflicted heavy stress on the homeowners, now elderly, and could bring
on a heart attack or stroke.
The real explanation for DEP's merciless
treatment of citizens is that the agency is powerless against developers. It
cannot stop them from destroying the Everglades, from destroying wetlands, from
polluting rivers, or from building in front of the coastal setback line. As the
state politicians protect developers from the DEP, the only people against whom
the DEP can use its authority are unrepresented citizens. Frustrated itself, the
DEP lashes out at powerless citizens.
In the small settlement of Inlet
Beach, there are numerous examples of developers getting what they want. Over
the years hurricanes have eaten away the beach and the dunes. As this occurs the
setback line for construction moves inland. Back when the real estate bubble was
being created by Alan Greenspan's irresponsibly low-interest-rate policy, small
beach front lots were going for one million dollars. In the midst of this
frenzy, a well connected developer bought a beach front lot for
$30,000.
The lot was not recognizable as such. It sits on flat land on
the beach. Decades ago it was a lot, but as the Gulf ate away the coast, the lot
is now positioned in front of the setback line. The developer got the lot for
the low price, because no one had been able to get a building permit for years.
But the developer got a permit. According to the head of the
neighborhood association at the time, the developer went to a DEP official,
whose jurisdiction was another part of the state and who was a former employee
of the developer, and was issued a permit. Because of its exposure, during the
real estate boom the house sat unsold for years. The community, which had
opposed the project, concluded that the developer just wanted to show that he
was more powerful than the law.
Currently, on six acres next to a state
park on the East end of Inlet Beach another well connected developer has
obtained DEP permission to compromise Walton County's highest and last remaining
sand dunes held in place with native vegetation in order to build 20 houses. To
protect the houses, DEP has issued a permit for the construction of a fifteen
foot high man-made sand wall, a marketing device that will offer little
protection.
According to information sent to me, nine of the houses will
be seaward of the Coastal Construction Control line. Apparently this was a
result of the developer being represented by a former county attorney, who
convinced the commissioners to allow the developer to plan on the basis of the
1996 FEMA flood plain maps instead of using the current 2007 maps. Since 1996
there have been a number of hurricanes, such as Dennis and Ivan, and the set
back line has moved inward.
When state and local governments allow
developers to set aside the rules governing flood-plain development, they create
insurance losses that drive up the insurance premiums for everyone in the
community. The disturbance of the natural dunes could result in a breach through
which storm surge can damage nearby properties. Instead of protecting people,
government is allowing a developer to impose costs of his project on
others.
Joseph Stack, Terry Hoskins, and 79 percent of the American
population came to the realization that government does not represent them.
Government represents monied interests for whom it bends the rules designed to
protect the public, thus creating a legally privileged class.
In
contrast, as at the West end of Inlet Beach, ordinary citizens are being driven
into the ground.
This is what we call "freedom and democracy."
Authors Website: http://www.paulcraigroberts.org/
Authors Bio:
Dr. Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury for Economic Policy in the Reagan Administration. He was associate editor and columnist with the Wall Street Journal, columnist for Business Week and the Scripps Howard News Service. He is a contributing editor to Gerald Celente's Trends Journal. He has had numerous university appointments. His books, The Failure of Laissez Faire Capitalism and Economic Dissolution of the West is available here, and How America Was Lost, can be ordered here. His latest book, The Neoconservative Threat To International Order: Washington's Perilous War For
Hegemony, can be ordered here.