Let’s be honest, quite a few Americans love a good war, especially
those Americans who have never had to bear witness to one first hand.
War is the ultimate tribally vicarious experience. Anyone, even pudgy
armchair generals with deep-seated feelings of personal inadequacy, can
revel in the victories and actions of armies a half a world away as if
they themselves stood on the front lines risking possible annihilation
at the hands of dastardly cartoon-land “evil doers”. They may have
never done a single worthwhile thing in their lives, but at least they
can bask in the perceived glory of their country’s military might.
This attitude of swollen ego through proxy is not limited to the
“Right” side of the political spectrum as some might expect. In fact,
if the terrifyingly demented presidency of Barack Obama has proven
anything so far, it is that elements of the “Left” are just as
bloodthirsty as any NeoCon, and just as ready to blindly support the
political supremacy of their “side” regardless of any broken promises,
abandoned principles, or openly flaunted hypocrisies. No matter how
reasonable or irrefutable the arguments against a particular conflict
are, there will ALWAYS be a certain percentage of the populace which
ignores all logic and barrels forward to cheerlead violent actions which
ultimately only benefit a select and elite few.
They do this, though they rarely openly admit it, because of
unbalanced and irrational biases which drive their decision making
processes. In the case of the wars in the Middle East, the common
public argument boils down to one of “self defense”. “They are coming
to get us!” At least, that is what we are constantly told. And I’m
sure that some Americans out there truly believe this. However, in
their heart of hearts, others instead relish the idea of imposing their
world views and philosophical systems upon others, even if it means
using cluster bombs and predator drones.
Some people simply hate Muslims, for one reason or another. Some
people believe that war will bring with it economic gain. Some are so
afraid of what they do not comprehend that they only feel secure by
attacking it. Some believe that the U.S. citizenry is morally obligated
to become entangled with governments like Israel’s, and support them
without question as if they are infallible, though they are often just
as corrupt as the governments we are directed to despise. And yet
others (for religious purposes), actually clamor for Middle Eastern
destruction in the desperate hopes that their version of biblical
prophecy will be vindicated. Ultimately, most Americans who support
continued destruction in the Middle East, or anywhere else for that
matter, do so out a selfish need for private absolution and elevation,
not out of a sincere sense of patriotism, and not because nations like
Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, or Iran present a legitimate danger to their
safety.
These men and women have invested their very identities into the
mechanizations of collective war. They will not be swayed by evidence
or honorable arguments. Any criticism of the actions of the collective
will immediately be treated as a personal attack on their individual
character, causing their minds to shut down completely.
As far as Iran is concerned, I am not here to convince the war-drum
pounding zombie hoards infesting the mentally impotent sewage soaked
wastelands of my country that their rationalizations for raining laser
guided death on the third world is a “reprehensible thing”. Given their
impenetrable biases, which I listed above, that would be a complete
waste of time.
I could, indeed, point out how in 1953 the U.S. and Britain overthrew
the democratically elected leader of Iran, Mohammad Mossaddegh, because
he refused to allow global corporate interests to exploit his country’s
oil resources. I could outline how the forced CIA installation of the
Shah in Iran and the creation of his secret police led to the torture
and murder of thousands of innocent people. I could list similar covert
activities over the past 100 years or so, in countries all over the
world, which have created the now universal disdain the third world has
for the U.S. government. I could even show them a PBS special from 1987
which effectively details this history and warns of what is now going
on today
But what about all the nuclear talk being shoved down our throats
lately? Doesn’t this supersede any historical concerns between Iran and
the U.S.? What if the terrorists get their hands on “the bomb”?!
On this issue, I could easily interject the fact that countries
supposedly hostile to the U.S., like North Korea, have long had nuclear
capability, and certainly the means to use infiltrators to deliver that
technology, yet, we haven’t sent the Western war machine after them. I
would also set the record straight by mentioning that the ONLY country
in the world that has used a nuclear weapon against another is the U.S.
I could educate these people on the exposure of secret Israeli nuclear
weapons programs since the 1970’s, and the fact that Israel even
attempted to illegally sell this technology to Apartheid South Africa:
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2010-05-24/israel-tried-to-sell-nuclear-weapo…
I could try to clear the air by reminding the uninformed that
Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta recently admitted that Iran has no
nuclear weapons capability. And, that this fact was repeated by an
Iranian nuclear scientist, Sharhram Amiri, who defected to the U.S. in
2010 with the help of the CIA in the hopes that he could be used to
disseminate propaganda on “secret” nuclear weapons programs in his
former homeland. Instead, he only reinforced the assertion that there
are no such programs:
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/LG21Ak01.html
With the CIA made to look foolish, they have now decided that Amiri
is “peripheral” to the Iranian nuke programs, and is no longer a solid
source of information. I could follow by pointing out how decidedly
convenient this is…
What about all the similarities between the lies on WMD’s in Iraq and
the rhetoric against Iran today? What about the disinformation put
forward by the IAEA and its cadre of foreign policy yes-men?
What about the fact that back when Iran was run by our own puppet
leader, the Shah, an iron-fisted sociopathic dictator, we were more than
happy that the country was developing nuclear power plants:
Sorry, but sharing this information with the warmongering percentage
of our American culture is futile. None of this data means a thing to
them. For these people, it’s not about facts; it’s about foggy
perception, uncontrolled emotion, and false identity. Understanding the
situation only complicates their pursuit of the next collectivist high;
that frenetic freak frenzy that takes hold of a population and makes
them swarm like mad bees, or hungry piranha, poisoning and devouring
everything in their path.
With this in mind, the only recourse I could possibly think of to
wake them up to their philosophical and moral folly is to expose them to
very real and debilitating consequences they will face in their
everyday lives in the wake of expanded conflict on the part of the U.S.
That is to say, you may hate Iran, you may hate Iranians, you may
despise Muslims, you may be driven by a childish need to live
vicariously through the exploits of your government, or, you might
actually believe the hype that Iran is in league with Al-Qaeda, that
they really are after nuclear weapons in a diabolical plot to harm
Americans, and you might truly believe that Israel is that “beacon of
freedom” in the Middle East and that all its neighbors must be pacified
for the sake of democracy. At bottom, whatever your deepest intentions,
and whatever you might think, this is irrelevant in the face of the
inevitable costs of war. If you support such a war, here is how it will
affect you when it breaks loose:
Exploding Oil Prices
The U.S. has had a ban on Iranian oil imports since 1979, however,
Iran still supplies about 5% of the global oil market. This might not
seem like much, but Iran also has the means and ability to shut down the
Straight of Hormuz, which is one of two major petroleum choke points in
the world. Around 17 million barrels of oil per day are shipped
through the Straight of Hormuz, or about 20% of all oil traded
worldwide.
In 2006, during the last major Iran war scare, experts predicted
gasoline price increases in excess of $10 a gallon if Iran was invaded.
http://money.cnn.com/2006/02/07/news/international/iran_oil/
This would devastate the U.S. economy, which is already hanging by a
thin thread. Iran has announced this past weekend it will cease all oil
shipments to Britain and France in protest of their support of economic
sanctions. This alone is causing oil to spike today. A global energy
crisis will financially decimate average citizens who will have their
savings sapped by extreme price inflation, not just in gasoline, but in
all goods that require the use of gasoline in their production and
shipping. If you like this idea, then by all means, support an invasion
of Iran.War Domino Effect
In January of 2010, I wrote an article for Neithercorp Press entitled
“Will Globalists Trigger Yet Another World War”. In that article, I
warned about the dangers of an invasion of Iran or Syria being used to
foment a global conflict, in order to create a crisis large enough to
distract the masses away from the international banker created economic
collapse:
http://www.alt-market.com/neithercorp/press/2010/01/will-globalists-trigger-yet-another-world-war/
In 2006, Iran signed a mutual defense pact with its neighbor, Syria,
which is also in the middle of its own turmoil and possible NATO
intervention. Syria has strong ties to Russia, and even has a revamped
Russian naval base off its coast, a fact rarely mentioned by the
mainstream media. Both Russia and China have made their opposition
clear in the case of any Western intervention in Iran or Syria. An
invasion by the U.S. or Israel in these regions could quickly intensify
into wider war between major world powers. If you like the idea of a
world war which could eventually put you and your family in direct
danger, then by all means, support an invasion of Iran.
Dollar Collapse
Make no mistake, the U.S. dollar is already on the verge of collapse,
along with the U.S. economy. Bilateral trade agreements between BRIC
and ASEAN nations are sprouting up everywhere the past couple months,
and these agreements are specifically designed to end the dollar’s
status as the world reserve currency. An invasion of Iran will only
expedite this process. If global anger over the resulting chaos in oil
prices doesn’t set off a dump of the dollar, the eventual debt
obligation incurred through the overt costs of war will. Ron Paul has
always been right; it doesn’t matter whether you think invasion is a
good idea or not. We simply CANNOT afford it. America is bankrupt.
Our only source of income is our ability to print money from thin air.
Each dollar created to fund new wars brings our currency ever closer to
its demise.
This combination of disastrous economic policy and disastrous foreign
policy has actually been used before. Great Britain once sat in the
position of economic authority that the U.S. sits in today, and the
pound sterling was once considered the world reserve because it was
required in the global trade of oil, just as the dollar is now.
However, British intrigues in the Middle East, and more specifically in
Egypt, led them into extreme debt. In the 1940’s and 1950’s,
international banks led by America and France threatened to dump British
Treasury Bonds in response to their efforts to dominate Middle Eastern
oil. Does any of this sound familiar?
This ultimately led to considerable devaluation of the pound. In
1967, the death blow was finally delivered when Prime Minister Harold
Wilson artificially reduced the British exchange rate by 14% overnight!
Meaning, in the span of a single evening, British citizens lost 14% of
their buying power, and every product they went out to buy the next day
would cost them 14% more.
It would be practical to mention that the move to destroy the British
pound came right in time for the implementation of new programs for the
construction of the European Union, and the Euro, the new supranational
currency which would later become the standard. The EU and the Euro
never could have come about while the Pound Sterling remained a world
reserve. Just another amazing coincidence I’m sure, and one that
couldn’t possibly have any relation to what is happening to the dollar
in 2012, right…?
So, if you like the idea of losing 14% or more of your buying power
overnight, and having that financial loss blamed on the tides of war,
rather than on the corporate bankers who actually created the mess, then
by all means, support an invasion of Iran.
Civil Liberties Destroyed
Do you like being able to walk down the street without having to
suffer through constant pat-downs by low wage brain-dead cretins in blue
gloves? Does it make you feel good to know that if you are ever
arrested, whether you are guilty or not, you are guaranteed by law to
receive a fair trial by your peers in a civilian court with a lawyer by
your side? Do you enjoy taking a long drive with the family without
facing check points, and predator drones constantly overhead every time
you put the top down to feel the wind in your hair? Don’t get too
comfortable, folks! These “luxuries” will soon be a thing of the past,
especially as the U.S. financial situation deteriorates and war
escalates. Think of all the new threats the elites in our government
can use to rationalize the usurpation of Constitutional protections when
war with Iran, or Syria, or Russia, or China, or all of them at once,
breaks out.
The term “terrorist” will take on a whole different dynamic. Great
national dangers often facilitate broader definitions of who is and who
is not an “enemy of the state”. Crisis gives wings to legislation like
the NDAA. In this kind of despotic environment, no one, even those
citizens who support the state in nearly all of its enterprises, is
safe. Maybe you love the idea of war with Iran, but at the same time,
hate the idea of having a TSA goon manhandling your wife or daughter in a
train station or on a street corner. Good luck with that. Speaking
out could be treated as disruption of national security measures. Off
to the gulag with you!
The “greater good” somehow always entails the dissolution of civil
liberties for the common man. Invariably, the establishment in power
favors no one, save a highly connected few. Being pro-establishment
does not necessarily protect you from a government given free reign to
do whatever it pleases in wartime. In the end, everyone is fair game.
If this is the kind of America you want to live in, by all means, support an invasion of Iran.
If You Can’t See The Big Picture, You Can’t See A Thing…
The relentless drive for war in the Middle East is not about
“spreading democracy”. It is not about terrorism. It is not about oil
(at least for the most part). It is not about Israel (at least, not the
Israeli people). It is not even about corporate profiteering by the
Military Industrial Complex. War in the Middle East is about changing
the way our country and our world operates, culturally, socially,
financially, and politically. War opens doors to social re-engineering
that could never be accomplished otherwise. War creates fear, panic,
rage, and allows dystopian fallacies to reign supreme. War, unjust and
dishonorable war, makes countries weak, and ripe for violent change.
Iran is not a threat to our way of life, and never has been. But,
war in Iran could easily upset the core of our entire country, and leave
us wayward strangers in the land we were born.
While much of the rhetoric of preemptive invasion that America has
been awash in these past few months is carefully crafted and
disseminated by government entities whose intentions are far from
honest, its effectiveness is mute without the helping hand of a
thoughtless subsection of the public. Every decade or so, a new
generation of idiot spawn comes of age to be willingly sacrificed on the
chopping block of globalist conquest. This new decade brings with it
the promise of not just more of the same, but perhaps the most costly
tithe to the gods of war ever made in our country’s history. This is
not our fight. This is a fight we are being conned into undertaking for
the profit of others, and thus, it is a fight we cannot win. Perhaps
when the blind mobs of this nation feel the abrupt sting of their
foolishness in their narrow day-to-day existence, they will finally
understand…
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