Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be
called the children of God
By James Quinn,
a certified public accountant
and a certified cash manager
TheBurningPlatform.com
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Generals gathered in their masses
Just like witches at black masses
Evil minds that plot destruction
Sorcerers of deaths construction
In the fields the bodies burning
As the war machine keeps turning
Death and hatred to mankind
Poisoning their brainwashed minds, oh lord yeah!
Black Sabbath – War Pigs
You
know civilization is in danger when I find more wisdom in the words
of Ozzy Osbourne than in the words of any elected U.S. official.
The U.S. war machine keeps turning. As we enforce our will on foreign
countries, we produce more people who hate us. Just when you think
the U.S. government is beginning to make sense by withdrawing troops
from Iraq, they make the terrible decision to shuttle 21,000 more
troops into the Afghan calamity. At a cost of $3.2 billion per month,
we will throw another $38 billion down a rat hole in a country that
has no vital strategic importance to the United States. Barack Obama
is doing this to prove that he is a true statesman. The Soviet Union
killed over 1 million Afghans, while driving another 5 million out
of the country and left bankrupted and defeated after ten years.
Young Americans will continue to die for who? for what? Our foreign
policy during the last eight years can be summed up in one military
term, SNAFU – Situation Normal All Fouled Up. These foreign interventions
are a smoke screen for what is really going on in this country.
When a government has unsolvable domestic problems, they try to
distract the public by creating foreign conflicts. General Douglas
MacArthur understood the danger.
“I am concerned for the security of our great Nation; not
so much because of any threat from without, but because of the insidious
forces working from within.”
Economic Opportunity Cost
“You can't say civilization don't advance... in every
war they kill you in a new way.”
Will Rogers
Any doubt that the Military Industrial Complex is as strong as
ever should be removed after examining Obama’s 2010 budget just
put forth. It calls for 26% more in spending on Defense than President
Bush spent in 2006. The Soviet Union collapsed in 1989, leaving
the United States as the only remaining superpower on earth. Since
1990, the United States has depleted the U.S. Treasury of $7
trillion for spending on Defense. With no military on earth
capable of challenging us why would there be a need to spend this
much on the military? Over this same time frame the U.S. spent $360
billion on science, space & technology and $52 billion on energy,
a mere 6% of the spending on killing machines. Military expenditures
benefit humanity in no way. If these trillions had been invested
by the private sector or devoted to energy and scientific research,
our economy might not be a hollowed out shell dependent on China
and oil exporting countries. Nationalists argue that the Defense
industry employs millions and benefits the country. These companies
employ brilliant engineers and scientists who spend their days developing
things that kill people more efficiently. If they had been employed
developing electric cars, solar power, wind power, nuclear power,
an efficient electric grid, infrastructure upgrades, or finding
a cure for Alzheimer’s, would the United States be better off today?
The National Debt in 1990 was $3.2 trillion. Today, it is $11 trillion.
This is a 343% increase in nineteen years. What benefit has $7 trillion
of spending on Defense produced for the United States or the world?
In 2001, spending on Defense was 17% of total governmental spending.
In 2008, Defense, Homeland Security, and war spending accounted
for 26% of government spending. In the meantime, major cities have
had blackouts due to an overloaded electrical grid, our 156,000
structurally deficient bridges crumble, one hundred year old water
pipes burst under our streets every day, and we send $500 billion
per year to foreign countries for oil. The 19 terrorist hijackers
who implanted their plan with knives spent less than $500,000 to
pull off their 9/11 acts of terror. The United States has spent
over $1 trillion in response, without capturing the mastermind of
the attacks.
You would think we must be trying to keep up with our enemies by
spending $765 billion per year on the Military. But one look at
the following chart reveals that the United States is spending as
much as the rest of the world combined. The two countries considered
potential rivals, Russia and China, spent $192 billion combined
in 2008. This is 27% of U.S. spending. From a foreign perspective,
one must wonder why the U.S. is spending such vast quantities on
our military. They can only conclude that it is for offensive intentions
rather than defensive. The United States soil has not been attacked
by a foreign power since December 7, 1941. Prior to that surprise
attack, a foreign power hadn’t attacked the U.S. since the War of
1812. With this level of spending, our leaders feel compelled to
interfere in the business of sovereign nations.
Other countries, such as China and Russia, feel they have no choice
but to increase their expenditures on the military. On a percentage
basis, they have more than doubled their expenditures in the last
ten years, and still are a drop in the ocean compared to the American
Empire spending. The fact is that the U.S., China and Russia all
have enough nuclear weapons to obliterate the world – mutually assured
destruction. The United States could realistically protect itself
with the 18 ballistic missile nuclear submarines that we have in
commission.
The U.S. has borrowed $609 billion from China, Japan and oil exporting
countries to wage a war in Iraq that was based on false pretenses.
None of the terrorist hijackers on 9/11 were Iraqis, they had no
links to Al Qaeda, and they had no weapons of mass destruction.
Historian Barbara Tuchman described “war as the unfolding of miscalculations.”
In 2002, Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld estimated the costs of the
war in the range of $50 to $60 billion, a portion of which he believed
would be financed by other countries. The United States invaded
Iraq to secure the 115 billion barrels of oil reserves, pure and
simple. We’ve traded the blood of young Americans for oil because
we chose to not develop a cohesive logical energy policy in the
last 30 years. Americans, not in the military, have sacrificed nothing
in the last 7 years of war. We bought SUVs, McMansions, flat screen
HDTVs, Blackberrys, iPods, and Rolexes while Americans died and
the cost is passed to future generations.
“Every gun that is made, every warship launched,
every rocket fired, signifies in the final sense a theft from
those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not
clothed.”
Dwight D. Eisenhower
As we spend $765 billion per year on weapons, 37 million Americans
live in poverty, with 46 million uninsured. There are 3 to 4 million
people homeless in any given year. Military Veterans, who make up
13% of the population, account for 23% of the homeless. This is
another example of government using Americans and then tossing them
away like a piece of garbage. Now, with the recession deepening,
tent cities of homeless are popping up across the nation. We pour
billions into killing technology while American families are forced
to live on the streets.
As the world spends $1.5 trillion per year on new methods of killing,
millions die the old fashioned way.
- 13 million people per year die from starvation in the world.
- The FAO says that 854 million people worldwide are undernourished.
- The World Bank has estimated that there were an estimated 982
million poor people in developing countries who live on $1 a day
or less.
- For the price of one missile, a school full of hungry children
could eat lunch every day for 5 years.
- Poor nutrition plays a role in at least half of the 10.9 million
child deaths each year--six million deaths.
- 1 child dies every 5 seconds as a result of hunger - 700 every
hour - 16 000 each day - 6 million each year - 60% of all child
deaths (2002-2008 estimates)
What kind of a civilized society allocates 44% of the taxes taken
from its people to war? Only 2.5% of your taxes go to science, energy,
and environment. Only 2.2% of your taxes go to education and jobs.
With a population of 304 million, the U.S. spends $59 billion ($194
per person) annually on education. Saudi Arabia, with a population
of 28 million, spends $33 billion ($1,179 per person) on education.
You produce the results that you would expect from your investments.
A full 15% of our population doesn’t have a high school diploma
(20% of African Americans & 43% of Latinos) and only 27% have a
college degree. How do we expect to lead the world in technology
and research with these figures?
Human Cost
Politicians hide themselves away
They only started the war
Why should they go out to fight?
They leave that role to the poor
Time will tell on their power minds
Making war just for fun
Treating people just like pawns in chess
Wait till their judgment day comes, yeah!
Black Sabbath – War Pigs
George Bush, Dick Cheney, and Donald Rumsfeld were politicians
who never had the “pleasure” of coming under fire in battle. The
brilliant anti-war novel Catch-22 describes these
men perfectly.
“Some men are born mediocre, some men achieve mediocrity,
and some men have mediocrity thrust upon them. With Major Major
it had been all three.”
The world was a huge game of Risk for these men,
with young Americans as the game pieces. Instead of conquering Kamchatka
in a board game, these three non-veterans sent 4,261 Americans to
their deaths in Iraq for a false cause. Their neo-con ideology convinced
them they could change the world.
“In modern war... you will die like a dog for no good
reason.”
Ernest Hemingway
Another 45,583 Americans have been badly wounded in Iraq. We’ve
lost 673 more Americans in Afghanistan without coming close to finding
Osama bin Laden. These three disgraced politicians will now write
their memoirs, raking in millions for telling lies and half truths.
The 4,934 dead Americans won’t have a chance to write their memoirs.
These three men will receive their reward on their judgment day.
As National Guard troops are deployed over and over again to Iraq,
they must realize that Catch-22 is alive and well in today’s military.
"There was only one catch and that was Catch-22,
which specified that a concern for one's own safety in the face
of dangers that were real and immediate was the process of a rational
mind. Orr was crazy and could be grounded. All he had to do was
ask; and as soon as he did, he would no longer be crazy and would
have to fly more missions. Orr would be crazy to fly more missions
and sane if he didn't, but if he was sane he had to fly them. If
he flew them he was crazy and didn't have to; but if he didn't want
to he was sane and had to. Yossarian was moved very deeply by the
absolute simplicity of this clause of Catch-22 and let out a respectful
whistle."
"That's some catch, that catch-22," he observed.
"It's the best there is," Doc Daneeka agreed
American soldiers who have completed their duty to country have
been lied to and had the rules of the game changed during the game.
Their politician leaders have reneged on their promises by sending
men and women back to the war zone or not letting them come home
on the timeline that was agreed to. Meanwhile, their families are
going bankrupt, losing their houses, and seeing their marriages
dissolve. Politicians started this war and are too cowardly to declare
failure.
“The military don't start wars. Politicians start
wars.”
William Westmoreland
Many more will die needlessly now that Barack Obama has chosen
to double down in Afghanistan. Another man who has never been under
fire is going to prove his manliness to other world leaders. He
should study the words of former Presidents who have been under
fire.
“I hate war as only a soldier who has lived it can,
only as one who has seen its brutality, its futility, its stupidity.”
Dwight D. Eisenhower
“My first wish is to see this plague of mankind,
war, banished from the earth.”
George Washington
President Obama follows the standard Presidential game plan and
dutifully gives patriotic speeches at a military base proclaiming
the bravery and sacrifice of our troops. These are the words of
politicians. The brutal reality for troops is much different. Representative
Ron Paul in November 2003 described the early mistreatment of our
soldiers.
- Fort Stewart, Georgia, housed hundreds of injured reserve and
National Guard soldiers in deplorable conditions who were forced
to wait months just to see a doctor. These soldiers made huge
sacrifices, leaving their families and jobs to fight in Iraq.
They found themselves living in hot, crowded, unsanitary barracks
and waiting far too long to see overworked doctors. This was hardly
the heroes’ welcome they might have expected. Only an exposé in
a major newspaper brought attention to their plight, prompting
an embarrassed Defense department to rush additional doctors to
the base.
- Some wounded soldiers convalescing at Walter Reed hospital
in Washington were forced to pay for hospital meals from their
own pockets. Other soldiers returning stateside for a two-week
liberty had to buy their own airfare home from the east coast.
Still others paid for desert boots, night vision goggles, and
other military necessities with personal funds.
- Existing federal rules forced disabled veterans to give up
their military retirement pay in order to receive VA disability
benefits. This meant that every VA disability dollar paid to a
veteran was deducted from his retirement pay, effectively creating
a “disabled veterans tax.” No other group of federal employees
is subject to this unfair standard; in every other case disability
pay is viewed as distinct from standard retirement pay.
The Humvees that soldiers were forced to drive did not have enough
protective armor. In December 2004, Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld
was giving one of his usual inspirational speeches when Army Spc.
Thomas Wilson of the 278th Regimental Combat Team, a unit that consisted
mainly of reservists from the Tennessee Army National Guard asked
him a question:
"Why do we soldiers have to dig through local landfills for
pieces of scrap metal and compromised ballistic glass to up-armor
our vehicles?" Wilson asked, setting off what the AP described
as "a big cheer" from his comrades in arms. Rumsfeld paused,
asked Wilson to repeat the question, then finally replied, "You
go to war with the army you have." Besides, he added, "You
can have all the armor in the world on a tank and it can be blown
up." I’m glad Donald Rumsfeld has a clear conscience. History
will not be kind to this man.
Rumsfeld also sent Americans into battle without protective body
armor. Only after bad publicity did the proper protection reach
the troops. The blood of many dead soldiers is on Rumsfeld’s hands.
While President Bush sacrificed by not golfing, terribly wounded
soldiers were sent to Walter Reed Hospital to recover. Instead they
entered hell on earth. Outpatient mistreatment was reported in 2004,
but nothing was done. In 2004 and 2005, articles appeared in the
Washington Post and in Salon interviewing First Lt. Julian Goodrum
about his court martial for seeking medical care elsewhere due to
poor conditions at WRAMC. A Washington Post expose in 2007 finally
revealed the horrible mistreatment of our brave wounded soldiers.
These reporters uncovered the following conditions:
- WRAMC's Building 18 is described in the article as rat- and
cockroach-infested, with stained carpets, cheap mattresses, and
black mold, with no heat and water reported by some soldiers at
the facility. The unmonitored entrance created security problems,
including reports of drug dealers in front of the facility. Injured
soldiers stated they are forced to "pull guard duty"
to obtain a level of security.
- The typical soldier was required to file 22 documents with
eight different commands – most of them off-post – to enter and
exit the medical processing world, according to government investigators.
Sixteen different information systems were used to process the
forms, but few of them could communicate with one another. This
complicated system has required some soldiers to prove they were
in the Iraq War or the War in Afghanistan in order to obtain medical
treatment and benefits because Walter Reed employees were unable
to locate their records.
Salon recently reported about the tremendous surge in suicides
by soldiers who have been pushed beyond their limits:
- Last year the Army had its highest suicide rate on record --
140 soldiers. But new data from the Army on Wednesday showed the
number jumping even higher. Forty-eight soldiers have already
killed themselves so far this year. If that rate keeps up, nearly
225 Army soldiers will be dead by their own hand by the end of
2009.
- Soldiers returning from long tours in Iraq or Afghanistan suffering
from combat stress were sometimes met with scorn from their superiors
and something bordering on neglect from some medical officials.
As their largely untreated problems deteriorated, their marriages
unraveled under the strain. They turned to alcohol and drugs and
in some cases saw no other way out than suicide.
- Healthcare officials at various installations who are struggling
to help say they're overwhelmed by huge numbers of troops returning
from two, three or even four deployments with acute mental problems
from combat.
Nearly 20 percent of military service members who have returned
from Iraq and Afghanistan — 300,000 in all — report symptoms of
post traumatic stress disorder or major depression, yet only slightly
more than half have sought treatment, according to a new RAND Corporation
report. Many service members said they do not seek treatment for
psychological illnesses because they fear it will harm their careers.
But even among those who do seek help for PTSD or major depression,
only about half receive treatment that researchers consider "minimally
adequate" for their illnesses.
For all the glory and accolades of dying for Dick Cheney, enlisted
soldiers make between $15,000 and $30,000 per year. The military
evidently does not prepare them well for the outside world as their
unemployment rate is 11.2% versus the national rate of 8.1%. A country
can be measured by how well it treats its veterans. Our leaders
talk a good game, but their actions prove they don’t care about
the human costs of war. They are busy planning their next move in
their game of Risk.
Moral Cost
Now in darkness, world stops turning
As the war machine keeps burning
No more war pigs of the power
Hand of God has struck the hour
Day of Judgment, God is calling
On their knees, the war pigs crawling
Begging mercy for their sins
Satan, laughing, spreads his wings
All right now!
Black Sabbath – War Pigs
Omar Bradley, the last five star General in the U.S. military,
was known as the “soldier’s general” during World War II. He was
portrayed by Karl Malden in the movie Patton as a thoughtful man
who cared about his troops. He was one of the key architects of
the Normandy invasion and led the 12th Army Group consisting of
900,000 men until the end of the war. After the war, Bradley headed
the Veterans Administration for two years. He is credited with doing
much to improve its health care system and with helping veterans
receive their educational benefits under the G.I. Bill of Rights.
He ultimately rose to Chairman of the Joint Chiefs. Contrast the
words of the fictional Colonel Kilgore from the movie Apocalypse
Now, with the words of General Bradley.
Kilgore: I love the smell of napalm in the morning.
You know, one time we had a hill bombed, for 12 hours. When it was
all over, I walked up. We didn't find one of 'em, not one stinkin'
dink body. The smell, you know that gasoline smell, the whole hill.
Smelled like
[sniffing, pondering]
victory. Someday this war's gonna end...
[suddenly walks off]
“The world has achieved brilliance without wisdom,
power without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and
ethical infants. We know more about war than we know about peace,
more about killing than we know about living.”
Omar Bradley
We need men like Omar Bradley and Dwight D. Eisenhower in control
of our country today. These men knew the horrors of war and didn’t
act like it was a game of chess. There are brilliant men in power
today. There are no wise men with a conscience in power today. Only
those without a conscience are able to gain power in today’s world.
General Bradley understood that morality was ultimately more important
than power and strength in the progress of a country. His words
are those of someone who knew we had failed in our moral duty:
“We have grasped the mystery of the atom and rejected the Sermon
on the Mount.”
- Blessed are the poor in spirit: for theirs is the kingdom
of heaven.
- Blessed are the meek: for they shall possess the land.
- Blessed are they who mourn: for they shall be comforted.
- Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after justice: for they
shall have their fill.
- Blessed are the merciful: for they shall obtain mercy.
- Blessed are the clean of heart: for they shall see God.
- Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children
of God.
- Blessed are they that suffer persecution for justice sake, for
theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
Peacemakers are ridiculed and shunned in today’s world. Old men
who care more about their own power than the human race are willing
to sacrifice the blood of young people for oil, phony nationalism,
strategic interests or philosophical agendas. The world is a game
for these old men. They care about legacy and ideology. War and
militarism are a failure of passion over reason. Albert Einstein,
whose discovery brought about the age of potential world destruction,
had no love for blind warriors.
“He who joyfully marches to music in rank and file
has already earned my contempt. He has been given a large brain
by mistake, since for him the spinal cord would suffice.”
The overwhelming cost of maintaining a global empire eventually
bankrupted Rome and Great Britain. Treasures were wasted, young
men were needlessly sacrificed in the name of the flag, and the
morality of leaders sank to unprecedented levels. The U.S. has advanced
financially and technologically, but continues to decline morally.
How far will we decline before the American people revolt?
I’m reminded of the movie Planet of the Apes.
The apes are divided into a strict class system: the gorillas
as police, military, and hunters; the orangutans
as administrators, politicians and lawyers; and the chimpanzees
as intellectuals and scientists. Humans, who cannot talk, are considered
feral vermin and are hunted and used for scientific experimentation.
The United States is now in the control of gorillas and orangutans.
If we continue down the current path of financial and moral decay,
allowing the Military Industrial Complex and corrupt leaders to
push us into further world conflicts we will experience the shock
and horror that George Taylor, played by Charlton Heston, displayed
in the final scene of Planet of the Apes.
George Taylor: Oh my God. I'm back. I'm home.
All the time, it was... We finally really did it.
[screaming]
You Maniacs! You blew it up! Ah, damn you! God damn
you all to hell!
If you are seeking the truth, join me at www.TheBurningPlatform.com.
Published - May 2009
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