Never pass up a chance to sit down or relieve yourself. -old Apache saying

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Pitt - In the Ditch

Why don't we ever seem to get people like William Rivers Pitt elected to public office? People who can make a point, turn a phrase, and are not already beholden to special interests seem to be pretty rare.

Usually, it seems, the really good people don't ever make it past primaries, or they have too much "history" that will prevent them from being elected, or they've basically given up on making a difference.

It takes so much money to run for any office these days that a lot of people don't even try.

Down In The Ditch
by William Rivers Pitt, Truthout


"It's hard to conceive that it would take more forces to provide stability
in post-Saddam Iraq than it would take to conduct the war itself and to secure
the surrender of Saddam’s security forces and his army. Hard to imagine."
- Paul Wolfowitz, 2/27/2003
There is never a shortage of Stupid in American politics, but by normal standards, our recent history has been pretty spectacular. Rep. Anthony Weiner is caught in what could very easily go down in history as the single most absurd sex scandal to ever unfold. The Republican leadership continues to play chicken with the debt limit, making even the titans of the financial industry nervous. Michele Bachmann is being taken seriously by the "mainstream" news media after the first GOP debate...and as far as Stupid goes, really, that's all you need to say.

Sometimes, however, the Stupid skyrockets to new and heretofore unknown heights. It takes a special kind of purebred dunderhead to raise the benchmark, and in that spirit, I give you Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA), who opined last week that once Iraq becomes a rich and prosperous country, they should repay the United States for the money spent on the invasion and occupation.

Let that sink in for a moment.

Now, don't get me wrong: it would be awfully nice to have back the hundreds of billions of dollars that were wasted through our blood-soaked exercise in futility in Iraq. Given the current state of the American economy, suddenly having gobs of cash injected back into society would indeed be a boon. We could maybe stop terrorizing elderly people with threats to the continued existence of Medicare. We could stop dunning public-sector employees and actually pay them what they deserve. We could even perhaps fix a bridge or two.

But you see, that money is already spent. It did not just dry up and blow away. It was stolen in fistfuls by companies like Halliburton and KBR. It was stolen in fistfuls by private mercenary contractors like Blackwater. Thieving scumbags like Ahmed Chalabi got their slice, and as for the rest? Well...


The Iraqi and U.S. governments have been unable to account for a
substantial chunk of the billions of dollars in reconstruction aid the Bush
administration literally airlifted into the country. If the cash proves to have
been stolen, the heist could represent "the largest theft of funds in national
history," according to a report in the Los Angeles Times.

Pentagon officials determined that one giant C-130 Hercules cargo plane
could carry $2.4 billion in shrink-wrapped bricks of $100 bills. They sent an
initial full planeload of cash, followed by 20 other flights to Iraq by May 2004
in a $12-billion haul that U.S. officials believe to be the biggest
international cash airlift of all time.

Iraqi officials say it was the U.S. government's job to keep track of
the funds, which were brought in as an emergency measure to keep basic
infrastructure going after Saddam Hussein's ouster. House Government Reform
Committee investigators found in 2005 evidence of "substantial waste, fraud and
abuse in the actual spending and disbursement of the Iraqi funds."

Witnesses testified that millions of dollars were shoved into
"gunnysacks" and disbursed to Iraqi contractors on pick-up trucks, with what
seemed to be little financial controls or accounting on the part of the U.S.
government.

Think it was an accident? That all this plunder took place because of a lack of "oversight?"

Ha.

The first thing George W. Bush and his people did upon (literally) taking office was to rampage through the Clinton surplus by way of two insane tax giveaways to the wealthiest among us. This was done for one reason: to kill the federal government's ability to spend money on the citizenry. The Grover Norquist "Drown It In The Bathtub" tactic extended to a pair of wars - one in Afghanistan and the other in Iraq - that became the single greatest defense industry payday in human history...while further denuding the federal government's ability to spend money on the citizenry. It was not an accident, but a deliberate plan, and from their perspective, it was executed flawlessly. This was a smash-and-grab robbery writ large, and if you think all that money is just "gone," well, you must not travel in the "right" circles.

The current crop of Republican leaders still play from the same cheat sheet, as evidenced by their desire to annihilate the remaining shreds and tatters of the American economy by threatening to let the debt limit slip, even as they chortle into their sleeves about getting away with several of the greatest American bank robberies of all time. Why are they daring the economy to implode? So they can eviscerate Medicare and Social Security, of course, not to mention collective bargaining rights and the ability of workers to earn a fair wage.

And after all that, one of their bright bulbs coughs up the suggestion that a nation we literally ground into powder should do us a big favor and pay us back all the money we spent putting boots to their necks and bullets through their bodies.

Hm...I wonder how soon that will happen...


BAGHDAD-In a city where sand clings to everything and the culture permits
empty plastic water bottles to be tossed into the street, residents in the
city's prosperous Zayuna neighborhood make sure their lawns stay green and their
fruit trees are pruned. But when residents step out of their walled-in
sanctuaries, they can't escape a city that in many ways still feels ungovernable
more than eight years after the U.S.-led invasion.

They see dirt and gravel streets marked by ruts and sinkholes large
enough to swallow a tire. Empty lots are garbage pits, and sewage from broken
pipes collects in small pools on neighborhood streets amid downed cables and
wires. There are a few slides at the neighborhood playground, but nearly as many
abandoned cars.

Although security has improved in recent years, the task of overseeing
the estimated 250,000 police and army officials who guard the city has also
created new management concerns, ranging from gaps in intelligence sharing to
frustrations from local officials about who should be contacted to report a
suspicious vehicle. Meanwhile, Baghdad's municipal government continues to
sputter as different entities jockey for control over reconstruction dollars and
grapple over whether American-style local governments can work in the Middle
East.

"Baghdad lives in chaos, chaos, chaos," said Jawad al-Hasnawi, a
parliament member.

Yes, friends and neighbors, these are the strokes of genius we have come to expect from our friends in the GOP. And people wonder why the United States of America is down in the ditch.

Original.

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