The
War On Terror Is Over. America Lost
This
article first appeared in The
International Forecaster newsletter.
24
April, 2013
It
has often been observed that the war on terror is unwinnable. After
all, how could a war on an abstract noun ever have its “Mission
Accomplished” moment? It is, according to this wisdom, meant to
drag on forever.
Just
because a war can’t be won, however, doesn’t mean it can’t be
lost. The truth is that the war on terror is over. And America has
lost.
Just
look at the images of
the Watertown lockdown. A city under a supposedly “voluntary”
lockdown that was in fact enforced by bands of roving SWAT team
members going door to door, forcibly removing people from their own
homes at gunpoint. Whatever the use of the word “voluntary” might
mean in this case, I defy anyone to differentiate these images from a
martial law scenario.
And
yet, amazingly, the media does not show us images of enraged
Bostonians. It does not interview those who were treated this way by
the SWAT teams. It does not ask those people directly affected what
they think, or report on dissent. Instead, we are shown images
of mindless
celebrations orchestrated
to the score of that age-old chant of the mob that has lost all
capacity to reason critically: “USA!
USA! USA!”
Surely it is a mob far under the hypnotic spell of the mainstream
fear programming that can cheer the destruction of their own rights.
It is even more perverse that this destruction is being done in the
name of two bumbling college-age boys who, it must be stressed, have
yet to be proven guilty of anything.
The
irony seems to be lost on much of the American population that scenes
like these are precisely what the all-pervasive “terrorist”
boogeymen supposedly want: a people so enslaved to the fear of their
own shadow that the actions of two hapless misfits can cause such
chaos and the disruption of so many people’s lives. This irony is
certainly NOT lost on a government that has tried
its utmost to
make people afraid of the so-called terrorist threat over the past
decade.
Yes,
the terrorists hate you for your freedom. So who are the terrorists?
And who is trying to take away your freedoms?
If
terrorism is the use of violence to further political ends, then the
real terrorists by definition are the ones who are ramping up the
fear after each and every incident in order to shape the public’s
perception. Has some shadowy group of scary bearded men with turbans
really caused the American population to cower in fear at the first
sign of a homemade explosive anywhere in the country? Or has the
government and their cronies in the media primed the population to be
afraid of something that, statistically, is less
likely to kill someone on American soil than a bee sting?
In
the end, the questions answer themselves. All that is needed is
reflection over what we have witnessed play out over the past week:
an Orwellian two minutes of hate directed not at these boys– about
whom almost nothing is known except for their previous contact with
the FBI–but at the ghost that has been haunting America’s
nightmares ever since the Bush Administration conjured
them into
existence.
These
ghosts will continue to haunt the American population until they, and
their like-minded allies around the world, choose to wake up from the
nightmare. After all, you can’t win a fight against a ghost. You
can lose one, however. The events of the past week have proven that
much.
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