
I believe this calls for a response.
First: I, personally, do not subscribe to any idea which says the citizens of any country are responsible for the actions of their government; as anyone who’s read me for a while knows, I am of the view that no government can or will adequately reflect the will of the average citizen even if it presumes to speak in his or her name. Governments have only one agenda, in the final analysis – to perpetuate themselves, and to do this they ally themselves with those forces which will help them to perpetuate themselves.
For instance, the government in this country is one which allegedly – since voted to power in a democratic election – speaks for the people; yet it’s not a government for which I voted and its policies go against virtually everything in which I believe. It is anti-egalitarian, pro-Big Business, utterly disregarding of the environment and of social realities in its domestic agenda; and in its foreign policy it is abjectly subservient to the dictates of the US. Therefore what this government, which is not my government, does is not in my name, and I refuse to be associated with its policies and be blamed for what it does and has done. In 2003, the government of the time came perilously close to sending troops to help in the imperial occupation of Iraq, backing off only because of political compulsions, and if it had sent those troops that would not have been in my name either.
Similarly, I do not blame all Americans for the actions of their government of the time; it would be moronic of me to blame them all even if one single individual American had opposed those actions, and, as we all know, there were literally millions of Americans who opposed them and continue to do so today. Even those Americans who were brainwashed by the pliant media into supporting those actions were not to blame – if, that is, they have woken to realities now and repudiated their former stance. Millions more have done this and they are not to blame.
Second: When I speak against those who supported that response of the American government, I do not restrict my criticism to American citizens: there were millions of Indians who supported those actions (the actions of a “tough government”) and continue to do so today, when ultra-pro-American rhetoric is welcome in the media, which it wasn’t eight or even five years ago. Those Indians, Filipinos, Canadians, or whoever who continue to support the Imperial agenda are as much to blame as the Americans who continue to do so, or even more because they have less excuse, as those actions are not of the country they live in.
Third: I believe that an Imperial government is harmful, above all, to its own citizens in the passage of time. The Empire’s own people become its worst victims, even though they may live through a Golden Age during the peak of its powers. When the crash comes, it is they who suffer the most. While there may be a soupcon of justifiable Schadenfreude in their plight, it doesn’t hide the fact that they’re as much the victims of the Empire as the people the Empire rules over; and so they are not people I can hate. The current plight of Americans who lose jobs and homes as the government pours money into lost wars and even more weaponry will illustrate my point.
Fourth: I believe the events of 11/9 were used by the US government of the time to begin two major wars which would have led, if successful, to at least two more major wars (against Iran and Syria) and whose ultimate aim was to secure profits for giant US corporations, including oil and “reconstruction” producers, mercenary groups, and the military-industrial complex. These profits would only benefit the super-rich and would do nothing for the ordinary American who would do the actual fighting and dying (and continues to die in ever-increasing numbers). Therefore if I were to be anti-American I’d be blaming them, the poverty draftees and other sacrificial victims, for the actions of those doing the actual sacrifice.
Fifth: I have, over the years, blasted just about every country I can think of. At a conservative estimate, I’ve criticised, in no particular order, the governments of:
India, Pakistan, China, Cambodia, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Iran, Iraq, Kenya, Ethiopia, Germany, Japan, Russia, Georgia, “Israel”, Britain, Italy, Brazil, Australia, and frankly I forget who else.
So if I’m anti-American I’m anti-nation-in-general as well, which I don’t really think is a bad thing to be.
A note: I’ve been deleted by a couple of contacts, at least in one of those two cases because of that blog post. (I should make it clear that another person and I had issues about the post which we resolved in an exchange of personal messages, and that this lady is not among those two contacts I mentioned.)
Now I believe that anyone is free to delete me anytime and I won’t make an issue of it; I don’t measure myself by the number of my contacts. But if you imagine that by criticising your government’s policies I am attacking you, personally, you probably should not be engaging with anyone who doesn’t live in your immediate social milieu, let alone someone halfway across the planet, anyway.
Bill.
I’m an American living in the good old U.S. of A. and wrote a comment taking issue with some of the things you wrote in your blog. However, you were not taking the side of the terrorist you simply disagreed with America’s response to the attacks. I am constantly amazed by my fellow countrymen who will fight to the death for the right to bear arms but are deeply offended by freedom of speech and your right to disagree with them.
AntwortenLöschenAgain a great blog. Thank you Bill!
AntwortenLöschenThere is a strange kind of hypocrisy in American attitudes towards anyone outside America who criticizes any American foreign policy. I belong to another group here on multiply and have witnessed at first hand how some of those who argue for freedom of speech within the States are petrified by those outside who use that same right to question American attitudes. Many I have come across on these groups who argue from a position on the American right seem to only see things in terms of right and wrong (they being right and all others being wrong... including Americans who do not agree with them). If anything is said which challenges their views, they turn to personal insults without attempting to go through a debating process first.
AntwortenLöschenOften, these same people see even the slightest criticism of their government as a grave personal insult, even if they spend the majority of their time complaining about their president!! While I am strongly against some American foreign policies and say so, that is not to say I am anti-American, in the same way if I see a friend with his flies open, if I tell him, I am not being anti-him.
Let us hope that those Americans who are not so paranoid about the views of others would stand up and be counted and show the world that the shallow and vocal few do not speak for all of them. The rest of us know this and know that There is a greatness about America which cannot be denied. Questioning the politics of a country, any country, is a legitimate form of debate. If it were not, it would be hypocrisy for the Americans who shout out when others criticize them to do the same about other governments.
A well thought out clearly stated opinion and one I applaud.
AntwortenLöschenAfter the 9/11 attacks people were rioting in the streets calling for blood.
AntwortenLöschenWe haven't been attacked again since then. Maybe it worked.
That's how countries solve problems at this time. Violence.
So things didn't go just perfectly. Wars don't usually work perfectly. Mistakes are made.
Wait until there's another 9/11 type attack. People will be back out in the streets again calling for more wars.
Jeff Marzano
They weren't in the UK, in fact over 1 million marched to demonstrate their opposition.
AntwortenLöschenSo America hasn't been attacked since, so what? What's the price that has been paid (apart from the obvious) by the US for waging war in Iraq and Afghanistan?
Maybe some countries resort to violence but that should not be the first answer. Churchill said "it's better to jaw jaw than war war".
The plain fact of war is that people die, not just soldiers but women, children and other innocents.
If there is another attack on the US the mark of a truly great leader will be if he or she chooses war only as a very last resort and then only after every possible option has been explored first.
While 1 million marched against the war 59 million stayed at home. It's what, and Bill might be missing this point, what's called democracy. I may not vote for a particular government, I may not like some of the policies that a government I do vote for pursue but, much as it irks me, I'm not always right and if the government has been democratically elected I should respect that.
AntwortenLöschenIt's an stance that's comparable to the "one true religion" one. If that is what one believes that is up to them but please, please think about the fact you are in the minority.
No one, least of all me, would deny life is S**t, that there are people out there with agendas, that life is unfair. Unfortunately this is life and it's not going to change soon. Call it the human condition, call it what you will, but this is the reality we live in.
True, but the fact that that number got of their backsides to protest is a significant point. Never before has that many people marched through London an indication that a very large number of the voting population were not happy at being taken to war.
AntwortenLöschenAs it turned out Bush and Blair lied to us. Now you can debate if that was by omission, commission or if they were themselves mislead. It's still a fact that we were lied to. Because the Blair government had no credible opposition he was able to win the next general election and in the US it is almost impossible to un-seat an incumbent President so Bush got to serve another term.
Whilst I agree that it's for the democratically elected government of any state to make decisions, it is also important that they are examined properly with due process. I don't believe Blair did.
I was busy working that day
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