The 'fin de regime'?
Eric Margolis -Toronto Sun viaInformation Clearing House
China's Taoists philosophers warned that you become what you hate. We see this paradox in Washington, where the current administration increasingly reminds one of the old Soviet Union.
The U.S.S.R. went bankrupt after spending 40% of national income on the military. President George Bush's administration will spend a staggering $419.3 billion US on the military this fiscal year. An additional $130 billion US has been budgeted in 2006 for the occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan.
That's $10.8 billion a month -- 40% above previous estimates -- and somewhat more than the monthly cost of the Vietnam War at its height. Add to this huge sum an estimated $1.5 billion in monthly secret expenditures in Iraq and Afghanistan by CIA and Pentagon intelligence.
Astoundingly, U.S. military spending in 2006 will equal the rest of the world's total combined military expenditures. I just saw an ad for the new, $115-million F-22 Raptor stealth fighter, trumpeting how its radar can "intercept communications of insurgents." Using a $115-million aircraft to listen to cellphone calls by a bunch of jihadis in Waziristan staggers the imagination.
Meanwhile, Moscow on the Potomac is in an uproar over government spying on citizens, torture, and what appears to be the mother of all influence-peddling scandals. Revelations that the super-secret National Security Agency and FBI have been monitoring domestic as well as international telecommunications have roused even the deadheads in Congress and the lapdog media. FBI agents are reportely spying on such nefarious "terrorists" as vegetarians and animal rights activists.
--snip--
A smell of "fin du regime" hangs over Washington, just as it did over the last days of decaying Soviet oligarchy. An out-of-touch leader presides over a lost foreign war and a morass of influence peddling and bribery, as the secret police struggle to keep a lid on growing dissent. [emphasis mine]
Did you catch that? The United States is spending more than the entire rest of the planet on defense. Are you feeling any safer? Let's ask those people in New Orleans what all that money bought them.
I hope this Canadian reporter is right. These guys have to go. I just don't know how we're going to do it if they get control of the Supreme Court.
I'm praying that Al Gore rouses people's ire with his speech Monday.
I still think the people ought to demand that President Gore, the one we legally elected, get to take office.

















3 Comments:
Liberals will save the day
mynewsbot.com
"A smell of "fin du regime" hangs over Washington, just as it did over the last days of decaying Soviet oligarchy. An out-of-touch leader presides over a lost foreign war and a morass of influence peddling and bribery, as the secret police struggle to keep a lid on growing dissent."
Love it. The French sometimes say it best, don't they? Fin du regime. Yeeeeess!!!
Unlike reporters and writers in this country, writers elsewhere have some needed distance from the whole brouhaha -- not to mention distance from the Long Arm of the {Bush Crime Family) Law. I trust them more. And I'm waiting for others to concur.
And Eric Margolis is a conservative. It's just that he's not an American conservative, so he hasn't drunk the same kind of Kool-Aid.
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