Power, Profit, Propaganda and Imperialism
By Ethan Indigo Smith
“Since armies are
legal, we feel that war is acceptable; in general, nobody feels that war is
criminal or that accepting it is criminal attitude. In fact, we have been
brainwashed…War and the large military establishments are the greatest sources
of violence in the world. Whether their purpose is defensive or offensive,
these vast powerful organizations exist solely to kill human beings… We should
all be horrified… but we are too confused.”
With all the wisdom and knowledge we have access to, I
simply cannot believe that the governments of the world are once again
positioning our armed forces in a war stance. I cannot believe that individuals
are allowing it, and even pushing for it, and volunteering to take part in its
violent uselessness. It’s as if there has been a breakout of some terrible
disease that wrings out moral essences, removes our impetus for
self-preservation and instills a self-destructive hatred of one’s fellow man.
There is no sound logic to war, unless there is something more we are not being
told…
The fog of war makes obtaining the facts stupendously
difficult. Although most prefer to believe government propaganda is a thing of
the past, history shows us that it is an inherent part of any wartime society,
obscuring facts and motivations in favor of those who initiate — and benefit
from — war. Known euphemistically as ‘public relations’, it is the
manufacturing of consent to suit a particular agenda, and along with its
‘proper’ use comes the ability to control the thinking of masses (both their
focus and beliefs) and mold the collective mind.
However, the more we know about history and the causes and
effects of wars in the past, the less we need to know about the wars of the
present. Indeed the more we know of the nature of war, the more likely we are
to reach accurate conclusions of our current situation, making contextual
hypotheses based on what we do know, without having to filter through what
we’re (nonsensically) being told.
“Now, according to
U.S. foreign policy in Syria, we want to fight ISIS while also fighting Assad
in Syria… even though ISIS is fighting against Assad in Syria, and the Russians
are helping Syria fight ISIS… so we may have to fight Russia to stop them from
fighting with Syria against ISIS. If that sounds insane to you, that’s because
it is.” ~ Investigative Journalist Ben Swann…So what’s the rationale?
War is a Racket
US Marine Corps Major General, Smedley Butler, eventually
concluded that “war is a racket” in which individuals are used like fodder for
institutions. Dear Smedley died the most decorated US Marine in history, and
one might merely read his concise 4-chapter book, “War Is A Racket”, to
understand the reality of war: it’s an act of institutions against individuals.
“War is a racket.
It always has been. It is possibly the oldest, easily the most profitable,
surely the most vicious. It is the only one international in scope. It is the
only one in which the profits are reckoned in dollars and the losses in lives…
It is conducted for the benefit of the very few, at the expense of the very
many. Out of war a few people make huge fortunes… In World War 1, a mere
handful garnered the profits of the conflict… [and] at least 21,000 new
millionaires and billionaires were made.” ~ Smedley D. Butler, War Is a Racket
Written from an insider perspective, it reads like it might
have been written five years ago rather than fifty. We are living in a world
today that is very much like the world of Smedley Butler, in that not much has
changed, not much has been learned, and we’re still doing the same thing — and,
inexplicably, expecting a different outcome.
War does not bring peace. As the saying goes, “Fighting for
peace is like fucking for virginity. ”War never serves any individual or group,
except a powerful elite few — the oligarchs who perpetuate and manipulate
tribal, feudal, nationalistic and fascist war-mongering the world over,
generating trillion dollar profits from death and destruction, while touting
their own patriotism, and encouraging your support.
One of the best ways to gain and maintain power and support
for war is to keep the people in constant fear — in fear of wars, of outsiders,
and more recently, of “terrorism”. Maintaining a culture of war-minded fear
keeps a society in a prolonged stress-response, the kind biologically linked to
the threat of death in the wild, enabling those at the top of the oligarchical
pile to easily direct the thinking of – and therefore to shape – the society
they control. As a result, we consent to a bulk of our taxes being spent on
funding the endless military-industrial-complex, instead of creating Nirvana
for ourselves. Believing we are under constant threat of the unseen, we have
become willing and dedicated contributors to the financial and political
objectives of the monstrous war industry, marketed to us under the guise of our
own security and protection.
This motive becomes clearer when we consider that the United
States Of America is actually a foreign corporation operating out of Washington
DC.
The facts are, the United States has been at war for 222
years out of the last 239 years. (That’s 93% of the time!) Since the
Declaration of Independence was written in 1776, the U.S. has actually been at
peace (albeit planning for further wars) for a total of only 21 years. [source]
Not one U.S. president actually qualifies as a solely peacetime president, and
the only time the United States lasted five years without going to war was
between 1935 and 1940, during the period of the Great Depression — from which
economic recovery was led by the war-industry.
More recently, if we look objectively at the history of the
Presidents of the United States since the end of the Second World War, we see
that each administration — Truman, Kennedy, Eisenhower, Nixon, Reagan, Bush, Clinton,
Dubya, and now Obama — created a presidential Doctrine directly pertaining to
war, either directly inciting conflict or inviting US involvement in it. Since
U.S. involvement in World War II began in 1940, most of the world’s military
operations have been initiated by the U.S., [source] and U.S. Military spending
today exceeds the rest of the world’s military spending combined, [source]
making the US war machine the single most profitable industry in the world. For
the period 2010-14, the United States was the world’s biggest exporter of major
arms, accounting for 31 percent of global shares, delivering weapons to at
least 94 different recipients — many we are told are “hostile to US interests.”
In the fiscal year 2015, US military
spending is projected to account for 54 percent of all discretionary federal
spending — over $598 billion — exceeding the combined budgets for science,
environment, housing, health, veterans affairs, education and transportation.
[source] The U.S. defense industry employs a staggering 3.5 million Americans —
or 1 in every 45 people employed in American [source] — while the private
companies supporting the military generate in excess of $300 billion in revenue
per year.
The U.S. economy is now so dependent on war, there is no
incentive for the U.S. Government to strive for peace — it just isn’t
profitable.
War-becomes-perpetual-when-it-is-used-as-a-rationale-for-peace
With the U.S. economy and military operations so
intrinsically linked, the American people have over time come to accept its war
culture as normal, believing the increasingly ludicrous propaganda that tells
us the U.S. is subject to threats from far weaker military nations and is nobly
“fighting for peace” — an oxymoron of the highest order. As a result, the U.S.
government has never been compelled by its People to create peace. The very
notion of peace — and I don’t mean winning wars, I mean real peace — is so
foreign to the people of the United States because we, as a nation, have never
really experienced peace, nor have our leaders (despite their rhetoric) ever
envisioned peace, much less planned for it or made it the focus of Presidential
Doctrine.
The culture of war we live in today is no accident but the
result of implicit cultural design — the very definition of conspiracy. Conspiracy (noun): a secret plan by a group
to do something unlawful or harmful.
Patriotism or Imperialism?
War is built on a narrative of “us” versus “them”, creating
the perception of threat and inhumanity in those we are told are our enemies.
With governments, corporate military machines and media working together,
achieving that perception in any population is the easy part — quelling those
who are opposed to war is more difficult.
To achieve this, the very idea of patriotism has been
confounded and confused with elitism, imperialism and oligarchical
collectivism. By definition, true patriots question information to educate
themselves and share it with others, in order that we might progress beyond the
status quo. Patriots are forward thinking, they observe and question actuality,
and prioritize what is right over personal concerns. They are able to embrace
change, including ceasing participation, and are willing to implement
beneficial change through their actions. But they do not drive change for its
own sake, or their own selfish ends, only when change is necessary to make a
right or cancel a wrong. In this way, the true patriot poses a distinct threat
to the status quo. They do not fear repercussions of their speech; they are
unafraid to speak the truth so that others may benefit.
So, within and without their own ranks, institutions seek to
isolate and disempower true patriotism by distorting and confusing its meaning,
and eliminating the notion altogether by instilling nationalistic ‘you’re
either for us or against us’ thinking – which is simply elitism dressed up in
patriots clothing. As a result, the true patriot is absent from our mainstream
narrative. Government and media institutions have attempted to delete the notion
of true patriots and transform our understanding of ‘patriotism’ into
flag-waving idiocy, war-minded zealotry, and hyper-nationlistic elitist
imperialism. And they have done this so completely, in fact, that people
identify materialistic oligarchs like Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton as
patriots. In actuality, most politicians around the world are oligarchical
collectivists, steering their societies toward imperialist goals — such as war,
environmental desecration for corporate benefit and diminished individual
freedoms, benefitting only those at the top of the social pyramid, not the
society on the whole.
So, before serving your country, first learn who your
government is serving.
Read more here:
wakingtimes.com
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