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I haven’t said much about the Iraq War lately.
I hate repeating myself and you can’t not when
you’re talking about the repetitive.
But, holy cow, look what happened this morning. First,
I beat my head on this keyboard, to bang a column out.
Nothing came out of my head as usual (the head-banging
trick almost never works) so I did what I always do
next. I checked CNN.com, to see
if anything had happened overnight. And the top story,
just 39 minutes old, was “Blackwater
security firm banned from Iraq.”
Just the day before, Blackwater contractors had been
blamed for killing eight civilians and wounding 14 in
what was seen by many Iraqis as a scattershot response
to small arms fire on a State Department motorcade.
You could say, “Insurgents shot at our State Department
officials, and the Blackwater people were contracted
to protect them, so what’s the problem? When the
insurgents stop shooting at us, Blackwater can stop
shooting back.”
You could say that if you missed the fundamental issue
involved, namely that whereas American military personnel
are accountable for their actions in Iraq, to the military
and ultimately to the American people, individual contractors
are not. All we can do is cancel an entire contract,
and that won’t happen because the security companies
have too many friends in the Bush Administration. Worse,
our government has not permitted their puppet government
in Iraq to hold military contractors to Iraqi justice.
So without any investigation of the shooting having
begun, everybody in Iraq had to know that the contractors
involved would never pay a price, even if they had knowingly
mowed down unarmed citizens in a deliberate massacre.
It wouldn’t matter.
Since I knew the puppet government in Iraq couldn’t
try these guys, it never occurred to me that they might
get away with booting them out of the country altogether.
It will be interesting to see if the order sticks.
I don’t know about the rest of you, but this
news gives me hope. I want to relish that hope. I want
to savor every drop of it. Therefore I will indulge
in fantasies, dreaming of the great news to come that
may have just been heralded.
It might be that this is the first of many such bannings.
Blackwater could be banned from Afghanistan. Then, countries
where Blackwater isn’t working now could ban Blackwater
from working there in the future. Then, countries where
Blackwater might never work anyway might ban Blackwater
from passage through them. The result could be that
Blackwater could be stuck operating entirely in the
United States.
That done, the American people might wake up and come
seriously face to face with the reality that the only
remaining reason for Blackwater’s continued existence
is to wait in the wings until the scheduled roundup
of undesirable Americans and facilitate their shuttling
off to the concentration camps. And having witnessed
the banning of Blackwater in the entire rest of the
world, they might get the cojones to do it themselves,
right here in the freedom-loving U.S. of A.
What’s that? It can’t happen? Americans
won’t get their rocks until the day comes they
can tell Iraq from Afghanistan on a map? Hey, don’t
rain on my dream.
I’m not done. If the Iraqis, who don’t
even have a real government, can tell Blackwater to
shove off, anything is possible. Americans could see
straight to try the board and management for treason.
They could elect a really good president.
The emerging testes could even affect us here in Seattle.
Seattleites might realize they’ve been irresponsible
to allow the MID Yellowjackets, unaccountable hired
vigilantes, to force poor people to conform to the selfish
greedy whims of the megacorporations that control the
Downtown Seattle Association.
One more dream: Instead of peeing themselves every
time they’re asked for a quarter and trying to
put a stop to the practice, Seattleites could get the
balls to just say no to panhandlers and keep walking.
Sound off and read more: http://www.drwesb.blogspot.com
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