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Snow Job in the Desert

By Paul Krugman, The New York Times. Posted September 5, 2007.


It appears that many influential people in this country have learned nothing from the last five years.

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In February 2003, Secretary of State Colin Powell, addressing the United Nations Security Council, claimed to have proof that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction. He did not, in fact, present any actual evidence, just pictures of buildings with big arrows pointing at them saying things like "Chemical Munitions Bunker." But many people in the political and media establishments swooned: they admired Mr. Powell, and because he said it, they believed it.

Mr. Powell's masters got the war they wanted, and it soon became apparent that none of his assertions had been true.

Until recently I assumed that the failure to find W.M.D., followed by years of false claims of progress in Iraq, would make a repeat of the snow job that sold the war impossible. But I was wrong. The administration, this time relying on Gen. David Petraeus to play the Colin Powell role, has had remarkable success creating the perception that the "surge" is succeeding, even though there's not a shred of verifiable evidence to suggest that it is.

Thus Kenneth Pollack of the Brookings Institution -- the author of "The Threatening Storm: The Case for Invading Iraq" -- and his colleague Michael O'Hanlon, another longtime war booster, returned from a Pentagon-guided tour of Iraq and declared that the surge was working. They received enormous media coverage; most of that coverage accepted their ludicrous self-description as critics of the war who have been convinced by new evidence.

A third participant in the same tour, Anthony Cordesman of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, reported that unlike his traveling companions, he saw little change in the Iraq situation and "did not see success for the strategy that President Bush announced in January." But neither his dissent nor a courageous rebuttal of Mr. O'Hanlon and Mr. Pollack by seven soldiers actually serving in Iraq, published in The New York Times, received much media attention.

Meanwhile, many news organizations have come out with misleading reports suggesting a sharp drop in U.S. casualties. The reality is that this year, as in previous years, there have been month-to-month fluctuations that tell us little: for example, July 2006 was a low-casualty month, with only 43 U.S. military fatalities, but it was also a month in which the Iraqi situation continued to deteriorate. And so far, every month of 2007 has seen more U.S. military fatalities than the same month in 2006.

What about civilian casualties? The Pentagon says they're down, but it has neither released its numbers nor explained how they're calculated. According to a draft report from the Government Accountability Office, which was leaked to the press because officials were afraid the office would be pressured into changing the report's conclusions, U.S. government agencies "differ" on whether sectarian violence has been reduced. And independent attempts by news agencies to estimate civilian deaths from news reports, hospital records and other sources have not found any significant decline.

Now, there are parts of Baghdad where civilian deaths probably have fallen -- but that's not necessarily good news. "Some military officers," reports Leila Fadel of McClatchy, "believe that it may be an indication that ethnic cleansing has been completed in many neighborhoods and that there aren't as many people to kill."

Above all, we should remember that the whole point of the surge was to create space for political progress in Iraq. And neither that leaked G.A.O. report nor the recent National Intelligence Estimate found any political progress worth mentioning. There has been no hint of sectarian reconciliation, and the Iraqi government, according to yet another leaked U.S. government report, is completely riddled with corruption.

But, say the usual suspects, General Petraeus is a fine, upstanding officer who wouldn't participate in a campaign of deception -- apparently forgetting that they said the same thing about Mr. Powell.

First of all, General Petraeus is now identified with the surge; if it fails, he fails. He has every incentive to find a way to keep it going, in the hope that somehow he can pull off something he can call success.

And General Petraeus's history also suggests that he is much more of a political, and indeed partisan, animal than his press would have you believe. In particular, six weeks before the 2004 presidential election, General Petraeus published an op-ed article in The Washington Post in which he claimed -- wrongly, of course -- that there had been "tangible progress" in Iraq, and that "momentum has gathered in recent months."

Is it normal for serving military officers to publish articles just before an election that clearly help an incumbent's campaign? I don't think so.

So here we go again. It appears that many influential people in this country have learned nothing from the last five years. And those who cannot learn from history are, indeed, doomed to repeat it.

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In a weak moment, since my thesis is written, I recently reconnected my tv.
Posted by: Sojourner on Sep 5, 2007 12:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So I have been able to enjoy Bill Moyers' return, and I watch Lehrer's News Hour with some regularity.

However, a couple times I have been outraged enough with administration apologists who have been assigned to Judy Woodward to interview--so much so that it has sent me to the keyboard to express my disappointment to the show's staff.

In attempts to balance the panel, Woodward gets liars in the Bush/Cheney mold and wolves in sheep's clothing like Hays from Connecticutt today. He was posed to viewers as one who was softening in his support for the war. That was quickly dispelled by his vigorous defense of Iraq progress.

Even the BBC online news show throws plaudits at the Bush policy. They used Bush's jingoistic address to the VFW repeatedly the other day as the intro to return to the news.

As I still get most of my news and opinion online, I am reminded now of the absence of criticism of American foreign policy in the msm. Even when it's not Fox, CNN, or ABC, it still sucks.

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» Unclean! Posted by: eddie torres
Your daddy doesn't love you.
Posted by: LMNOP on Sep 5, 2007 2:28 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"It appears that many influential people in this country have learned nothing from the last five years."

This is kind of ironic. It implies that the administration has learned nothing from the Iraqi misadventure. That, in turn, implies that it was aiming for some other outcome other than to put America into a hopeless quagmire, that the quagmire was due to mistakes rather than deliberate as Cheney’s recently surfaced CONFESSION from 1994 strongly implies (click on the word CONFESSION to see).

The neocons are the most potent and vicious enemy that the United States, its Constitution and its people have ever encountered, more than any Nazis or Communists or any other overt enemy. Unthinkable, huh? Yeah, for the great Paul Krugman, too. Stuck in gosling mode, still bonded instinctually and irrationally to the government parental figure, however abusive it is. The neocons must be our friends, right? They're Americans, after all.

What do they have to do to America for Americans to start seeing them as more than the heartless and incompetent boobs looking out for us that they pretend to be, and to begin to see them as the deliberate destroyers of America that I say that they are?

Seriously, ask yourself this: if Bush and Cheney and their Saudi-loving syndicate actually were trying to destroy the US (remember trying to sell our port security to the Arabs - LOL), how far would they have to go for you to see that? Start a nuclear war? Release anthrax on the American people. Seriously. If that happened, would you know then? Or would you just call them bumbling clowns again?

Go ahead and believe that, Charlie Brown, as the administration sets up Iraq on the football tee for the American people to kick. Maybe that'll help America if we do that, huh? That's pretty likely, isn't it? Unbelievable denial and trust. Lethal, really.

Wake up, little gosling. Your daddy doesn't love you.

So, what’s the irony of the opening quote? I’d say that if Krugman is still positing that Bush et al. are trying, but are failing to learn from their mistakes of the last five years (or more), he’s the one who hasn’t learned what needed to be learned in the last five years: that our government has somehow been infiltrated by its enemy.

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» RE: Your daddy doesn't love you. Posted by: Constitutionalist75
Same Old Song and Dance
Posted by: Tom Degan on Sep 5, 2007 4:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In a column late last year, Paul Krugman warned America that in 2007 they should expect a "rolling constitutional crisis". Well, my goodness! He got that right, didn't he?

When General Petraeus is testifying before the lawmakers with his so-called "progress report". I assume he will be under oath. That being the case, I hope one of those polticians in attendance has the common sense to ask him, "General, did you write this report? And if you did not write it, who did?" I'd love to hear that answer! Wouldn't you?

Of course, the whole thing is being cooked up by the White House! It will be just more lies designed to destract the electorate from the nasty truth: Invading the (like it or not) sovereign antion of Iraq was the dumbest foreign policy move in American history.

Are the American people going to be stupid enough to get fooled again? Yeah. They are.

Tom Degan
"The Rant" by Tom Degan

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» RE: Same Old Song and Dance Posted by: dayenta
» RE: Dayenta Posted by: Tom Degan
» RE: Dayenta Posted by: cvtemptor
Why Does Warmongering Work?
Posted by: Roy Eidelson on Sep 5, 2007 4:53 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
From a psychological perspective, I think warmongering “works” because it targets the core concerns that often govern our lives as individuals and groups—concerns about personal and collective vulnerability, injustice, distrust, superiority, and helplessness. I apply this framework to the Bush administration’s war in Iraq—and its possible plans for an attack on Iran—in a 10-minute online video entitled “Resisting the Drums of War.” The video examines ten warmongering appeals and provides counterarguments against them. It’s available for viewing HERE.

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Catullus13
Posted by: catullus13 on Sep 5, 2007 5:02 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Welcome to Idiocracy.

People pretty much get the government they deserve.

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» RE: Catullus13 Posted by: leerhok
Bill Perdue, RainbowRED Organization
Posted by: donal1944 on Sep 5, 2007 5:24 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A week or two ago, George Bush’s brain, Karl Rove, took a hike and it quite unhinged him. Now he WANTS to draw the parallels between Vietnam and Iraq. In place of lies maybe a little truth wouldn’t hurt for a change.
Both parties back US military aggression and are liable for the death tolls in Vietnam and Iraq and for the civil wars that erupted in their wake. Vietnam was the victim of a criminal invasion by a Democrat 'peace' President and Congressional complicity. Nixon continued LBJ’s war until the US military was beaten by obstinate Vietnamese resistance, American antiwar sentiment and a sea change of sentiment in the draftee Army.
The young draftees were against the war and that changed everything. They organized active duty antiwar groups and uniformed soldiers and sailors marched in demonstrations. In Vietnam itself an unforeseen escalation began. Antiwar sentiment among solders escalated from anger to rage to fraggings, eventually quite a lot of them, and then to individual and group mutinies. The army called it ‘lack of proper fighting spirit’ but GI"S either didn’t fight or didn’t fight well and it led to failed military operations.
Nixon and the Pentagon brass feared their army would crumble so Nixon declared ‘victory’ and began a pullout. At the end they had one last magnificent offensive which didn’t slow down until the Generals and Admirals reached San Diego soon after April 30th, 1975.
The invasion and escalations in Iraq are the responsibility of a Republican administration and Congress with Democrat collusion, including that of Hillary Clinton, poised to replay the Nixon role if she wins.
You only need to know three things about these wars.
They’re needless, unlawful wars based on lies and backed by Democrats and Republicans. If Hitler, Goebbels, Goering. Keitel and von Ribbentrop were war criminals what does that make Bush, Cheney, Rice, Rove and Powell? They’re costly wars. Vietnam resulted in the probable deaths of over a million civilians but they were dying too fast to count plus 58,219 GI’s dead and 153,356 wounded. The criminal invasion of Iraq has killed perhaps as many as 650,000 civilians but like Vietnam an accurate civilian death toll is not to be had. As of today, September 5, 2007, 3,742 GI’s are dead, with 15,233 wounded and tossed back into combat. A further 12,429 GI’s have devastating wounds. Like Vietnam, their medical care is poor, their lives are shattered, and many will end up on the streets where veterans of Vietnam and Gulf One can give them survival tips.
Although the war is enormously costly and its inflation will smolder through the economy for a decade or so, like Vietnam, it’s the dead and wounded who must be our first priority. How many more will fall before we build a movement powerful enough to force an end to it.

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What about the snow job at the NY Times?
Posted by: dover23 on Sep 5, 2007 7:00 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Times ignored all the important anti-war voices (such as Scott Ritter) when it still mattered. Instead, they printed lies about Iraq on the front page to generate support from the intelligentsia, with Judith Miller as the fall gal.

Does anybody still read the Times for anything more than fashion, sports, food, travel, or books? In other words, who has learned nothing from the last five years?

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most dangerous
Posted by: davy on Sep 5, 2007 7:21 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Those administration boys are now at their MOST dangerous !! Their wounded and afraid. Remember BEFORE 911 they were becoming laughable - then - ALL CHANGE. Their only hope is one more big terrorist attack. If you yanks ever REALLY find out exactly what they have done in the name of "democracy" they would be put in jail, mainly to protect them. $$$$$$$$$$$$

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» RE: most dangerous Posted by: Constitutionalist75
Corporate media
Posted by: frank69 on Sep 5, 2007 7:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The corporate media strikes again! BS, BS, BS, and still more BS.
"The surge is working."
"We're turning the corner."
"There's light at the end of the Tunnel."
"Unconditional surrender."
"Support the troops."
"We'll stand down when the Iraqis stand up."
The insurgency is in it's last throes."
"Weeks rather than months."
"We must stay the course."
Blah, Blah, Blah!

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MORE OF THE SAME
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Sep 5, 2007 7:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Even ordinarily good writers are running out of stuff. How many ways can we say the same thing? Say what you will about Bush, he gets what he wants. More to the point, people give him exactly wants he asks for, they always have. He doesn't expect 'no' for an answer and doesn't get it. It's truly amazing how people willlingly gave up so much just so George wouldn't throw a temper tantrum. I hope we can pull ourselves out of this. Thanks, ANNA

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Unbelievable - does every news outlet in this country have blinders on?
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Sep 5, 2007 8:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's called oil. It's called the world's second largest oil reserve, with low costs of production. It's called a military seizure of foreign oilfields.

Nevertheless, the media won't discuss it. Paul Krugman must be smirking when he claims that "Above all, we should remember that the whole point of the surge was to create space for political progress in Iraq."

The surge was an attempt to pressure the Iraqi government to sign the hydrocarbon law which transfers control of Iraqi oil to Western oil corporations - which was the plan from the beginning.

In a grossly non-reported event of great significance, the IDP just met in Dubai.

See Iraq Oil, Gas, Petrochemical & Electricity Summit
2-4 September 2007, Dubai, UAE


Ben Lando at UPI did cover this story:

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates, Sept. 4 (UPI) -- The question is simple on the third and final day of a major Iraqi energy conference where hundreds of hungry oil men and women broke bread with Iraq’s industry chiefs, politicians and technocrats: When will Baghdad set the ground rules for the international oil community’s long-awaited venture into the largest oil prize on Earth?

The answer, evenly nuanced, is clear: A version of the Iraq oil and natural gas law was agreed to by most of Iraq’s political leadership last week, and when Parliament resumes this week it will, possibly, debate the law and, perhaps, maybe vote on it soon.

“They have a deal on the government level. Once it comes to the Parliament, it is the Parliament who has to have the say,” Abdul-Hadi al-Hasani, deputy head of Parliament’s Energy Committee, said on the sidelines of the summit, though he hasn’t seen the latest version of the bill yet."


Still, there's little mention of the fact that the Iraqi oil unions have been shut out by the puppet government, that Iraq's odious debt run up under Saddam is being used as leverage to force Iraq to give away it's oil, no mention of the role that the IMF - World Bank - Paris Club is playing in this scheme - all topics that the corporate press won't touch.

Krugman's liberal perspective is revealing, in that he essentially refuses to acknowledge the real reasons for the Iraq invasion, and follows in Bush and Cheney's lead with his vague statements about 'political progress'.

Krugman needs to sit down and read War is A Racket

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Krugman doesn't want to tell the truth
Posted by: xi_people on Sep 5, 2007 8:17 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I like Paul Krugman, and view him as a decent individual who has been sounding the warning alarm for a long time -- way before it was considered "popular" to voice dissent over administration policies.

That being said, he is being thoroughly disingenuous with articles like this one because he obviously knows that they don't even come close to disclosing the real truth behind what's happening in Washington.

"The truth" is probably too scary for someone like Krugman, who doubtlessly virulently disagrees with what's going on, but also doesn't want to see his way of life -- along with millions of others -- destroyed. And that's where this country is headed.

As other posters have already noted, trying to pretend that all of the current and future death and destruction hasn't been deliberate is asinine. No mistakes are being made here; it is part of a planned, overt strategem that will result in absolute disaster for ordinary Americans -- most whom show no inclination to remove the blinders from their eyes to see what's truly going on.

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John Kenneth Galbraith said it perfectly,
Posted by: fearn on Sep 5, 2007 8:45 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"People of privilege will always risk their complete destruction rather than surrender any material part of their advantage."
Americans, for the most part, would rather have unhappy, insecure lives with all of their stuff than happy, peaceful lives with less. Brainwashed suckers pretty much sums it up!

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» RE: John Kenneth Galbraith said it perfectly, Posted by: Constitutionalist75
And for some better coverage of the current situation:
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Sep 5, 2007 9:50 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Iraqi parliament faces US deadline, Al-Jazeera, today

"MPs face two major issues: whether former Baath party members will be allowed back to positions of power and whether to pass an oil law aimed at dividing up resources."

The business about putting ex-Baathists back in power is a hint that BushCo wants to put a brutal dictator back in charge - a Saddam clone, but one who will answer to the US and won't break ranks like Saddam did. If that happens, no doubt the first action taken will be an attempt to crush the independent Iraqi oil unions. Think of the robber baron era in the USA, c. 1900.

More on the corrupt flawed reconstruction process:
Water plant blamed for Iraq cholera, LA times Sept 1

"Aid agencies had warned of the possibility of a cholera outbreak as blazing summer heat settled in Iraq, where the infrastructure is shattered by war and neglect. The disease tends to appear in the summer because, as the temperature rises, Iraq's chronic electricity shortages make it difficult to operate pumps at sewage and drinking-water treatment plants, which leaves many people without clean water."

The reconstruction contracts were just a giveaway of US tax dollars and Iraqi oil money to Bush-connected engineering firms, most notably Bechtel (think George Schultz), but also Fluor, etc.

If you were an Iraqi citizen, what would you make of all this? What if your home state was invaded by a foreign power, who bombed all your water and electricity systems? What would you do?

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This discussion may be irrelevant
Posted by: ReallyBearish on Sep 5, 2007 9:53 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"It's the economy, stupid!" Remember that quote?

Americans have grown up with the belief that war is "good for the economy" based on the outcome of WWII. Even though the Vietnam War produced the biggest round of hyperinflation in US history, Joe and Mary Idiot, the typical voter family, still thinks that war is good for the economy.

We are about to prove that bit of crapola to be complete nonsense. The economic geniuses in Washington are about to pull of an inflationary depression. When economics bitch-slaps the voters, nobody will even think about the "cut and run" strategy that left Iraq in ruins, along with our foreign policy.

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» RE: This discussion may be irrelevant Posted by: Constitutionalist75
Enter the era of the tin-pot American dictator
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Sep 5, 2007 2:31 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think most people do know that no nation has ever, in recorded history, benefited from protracted warfare - but it all depends on how one defines 'the nation'. There's been an ongoing push by the corporate media in the US to get the the public to identify their interests with those of uber-wealthy internationalists - magazines like The Economist and Forbes are always breathlessly listing the names of newly minted billionaires, followed by the endlessly repeated 'a rising tide lifts all boats'.

Thus, what happens in wartime is that the nation as a whole becomes impoverished, for the very simple reason that a tank or a bomb has no further economic value, unlike say, a tractor or a set of solar panels or a refurbished electricity grid (The post WWII economic boom was post-war). However, war contracts allow that reduced total wealth to become concentrated in fewer and fewer hands, leading to what you see now in the US - a growing class divide between a vastly larger number of poor people and a slightly larger number of grossly wealthy people.

Keep going on this path and eventually you end up with something like a Latin American banana republic or Idi Amin's Uganda regime - palatial mansions for the ultra rich surrounded by private, well-armed and well-fed security forces, while the rest of the country lives in squalor and poverty.

What seems unique about the United States today is how many ordinary citizens have been suckered into believing that this state of affairs is actually to their benefit. The recent sweep of home foreclosures is waking some people up - and when they start to gut the corporate and government pension funds, perhaps it'll become more clear. Bush's effort to gut Social Security was just another step in this direction.

It's just the Enron debacle writ large - the ultra-rich will make sure that ordinary citizens can't get their hands on their funds while they vacuum out all they can - I'm guessing that a lot of these people have already set up escape routes to foreign countries, just like a lot of Argentinian bankers did as their economy went belly up.

It all began decades ago, as the real basis of any economy - a skilled human labor force - was gutted as jobs were outsourced to colonial manufacturing zones in the Third World. Add that in to global resource exhaustion and the failure to transition to a renewable-energy based economic platform, and here we are - drowning in our own shit.

Most people in this country have NO IDEA how difficult it will be to reverse this, though it still is possible. Corporate control of local, state and national politics will have to be ended, all the free-trade agreements will have to be tossed, and the corporate control of media, academic institutions and the courts will have to be terminated, and the entire economy will have to transition to a renewable energy base.

Meanwhile, most of the American public is sitting slack-jawed in front of the TV watching the antics of the latest exposed celebrity, or is reading the recycled blather of some idiotic economic-political pundit at the Wall Street Journal. The intellectual elites are even more brainwashed than the powerless poor.

I'm trying to think of something positive to end this with, but I seem to be at a loss. Germany is behaving sensibly, at least.

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People assume our gang can prevail
Posted by: daw13 on Sep 6, 2007 6:36 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
no matter how awful its program.

One comment noted how Krugman always fails to address the possibility that the war is proceeding quite satisfactorily from the point of view of our-gang leaders. Another noted J.K. Gailbreath's observation that ruling classes will accept a lot of risk (for the rest of us) to insure their own uninterrupted comfort. Another said that we get the government we deserve. I would amend that to "want" or "will put up with."

Until citizens understand that our very physical survival is at risk, that our-gang is less likely to produce an however disgusting form of stability, than utter chaos, not much MEANINGFUL activist challenge to them will emerge.

The education of the citizenry concerning our huge vulnerability is a task yet to be embraced by Progressives who fail even uniformly to oppose the war.

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Krugman must know better
Posted by: herbal on Sep 6, 2007 1:45 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We have war because "influential people" are war profiteers. As Deep Throat said, "Follow the money", to answer the why question. Mr. Krugman could use his investigative talents productively rather than wringing his hands in wonderment.

Mr. Krugman, begin by inquiring into profitability of the top war materials corporations like, Boeing, GE, General Dynamics, DuPont, etc., then the new and old private contractors like Haliburton's Brown and Root, Blackwater, Food Services of America, etc. and then the small upstarts like Insitu. Track the flow of Wall St. capital as well as Defence Dept. spending. What cities and what states are dependent on war industry. To what extent is our national economy dependent on perpetual armament, and war to ensure its inventory turnover?

Then track what individuals own the stock, who hire the lobbyists and who run through the revolving public/private doors. Who pays and who is owned by AIPAC? Name them.

Then we will not need to wonder in amazement to know our very culture is wounded, corrupted to the quick by wanton greed. Mr. Krugman, New York Times, please do us the public service. Then challenge us all by recognizing that we voters, all, are complicit because we allow it to go on and on.....

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