The Price of Freedom, I Think.

I was saddened to hear that CJ of ASP has been called back to Iraq. His local news did a nice story on him.and video.

The piece includes a very sobering moment about the obvious risk or being hurt or worse. CJ’s final comment is “that’s the price of freedom, I think.”

It was easy to put myself in CJ shoes for moment. With the kids unwrapping their presents in a cozy warm suburban home and his young wife – just beginning their lives together really.

And I thought to myself, in CJ’s shoes it would be next to impossible to say goodbye to your family and head back to Iraq if the idea that it’s the “cost of freedom” might actually be an assumption or just wrong.

And I thought I wanted to ask CJ to think about the cost of freedom while he’s in Iraq this time – to really think about if there might be other ways to keep our freedom and bring peace to the world, or if our freedom really IS at risk?

But then I jumped back into CJ’s shoes again; father, husband, soldier, son, and I realized that for CJ, and so many others, the idea that the war in Iraq may not in fact be related to our freedoms at all — might just be impossible in his position.

I leave CJ with this as I wish him all the luck in the world; there are many great and brilliant teachers and historians on this planet and you can meet them through their books and writings, and you can come to know history through their wisdom if you choose to. Seek them out, read them, hear them, long always for a deeper truth. Good luck CJ.

Robert Scheer from here.

The public, seeing through the tissue of Bush administration lies told to justify an invasion that never had anything to do with the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11 or weapons of mass destruction, now has begun a national questioning: Why are we still in Iraq? The answers posted most widely on the Internet by critics of the war suggest its continuation as a naked imperial grab for the world’s second-largest petroleum source, but that is wrong.

It’s not primarily about the oil; it’s much more about the military-industrial complex, the label employed by President Dwight D. Eisenhower 45 years ago when he warned of the dangers of “a permanent arms industry of vast proportions.”

The Cold War had provided the rationale for the first peacetime creation of a militarized economy. While the former general, Eisenhower, was well aware of the military threat posed by the Soviet Union, he chose in his farewell presidential address to the nation to warn that the war profiteers had an agenda of their own, one that was inimical to the survival of American democracy:

“In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.”

Ponder those words as you consider the predominant presence of former Halliburton CEO Dick Cheney in the councils of this White House, and how his old company has profiteered more than any other from the disaster that is Iraq. Despite having been found to have overcharged some $60 million to the U.S. military for fuel deliveries, the formerly bankrupt Halliburton subsidiary Kellogg, Brown and Root continues to receive hundreds of millions of dollars in lucrative contracts.

There is more. Military spending has skyrocketed since the 9/11 terrorist attacks, returning to Cold War levels. A devastating report by the Center for Defense Information, founded by former top-ranking admirals and generals, reveals that in the most recent federal budget overall defense spending will rise to more than $550 billion. Compare that to the $20 billion that the United Nations and all of its agencies and funds spend each year on all of its programs to make this a safer and more livable world.

That U.S. military budget exceeds what the rest of the world’s nations combined spend on defense. Nor can it be justified as militarily necessary to counter terrorists, who used primitive $10 box cutters to commandeer civilian aircraft on 9/11. It only makes sense as a field of dreams for defense contractors and their allies in Washington who seized upon the 9/11 tragedy to invent a new Cold War. Imagine their panic at the end of the old one and their glee at this newfound opportunity.

Yes, some in those circles were also eager to exploit Iraq’s oil wealth, which does explain the abysmal indifference to the deteriorating situation in resource-poor Afghanistan, birthplace of the Sept. 11 plot, while our nation’s resources are squandered in occupying Iraq, which had nothing to do with it.

Yes, some, like Paul Wolfowitz, the genius who was the No. 2 in the U.S. Defense Department and has been rewarded for his leadership with appointment as head of the World Bank, did argue that Iraq’s oil revenue would pay for our imperial adventure. A recent study by Nobel Prize-wining economist Joseph E. Stiglitz and Harvard University’s Linda Bilmes marked that absurdity by estimating the true cost of the Iraq adventure to U.S taxpayers at a whopping $2.267 trillion, in excess of any cost borne by the Iraqis themselves.

The big prize here for Bush’s foreign policy is not the acquisition of natural resources or the enhancement of U.S. security, but rather the lining of the pockets of the defense contractors, the merchants of death who mine our treasury. But because the arms industry is coddled by political parties and the mass media, their antics go largely unnoticed. Our politicians and pundits argue endlessly about a couple of billion dollars that may be spent on improving education or ending poverty, but they casually waste that amount in a few days in Iraq.

As Eisenhower warned: “We should take nothing for granted, only an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals, so that security and liberty may prosper together. … We want democracy to survive for all generations to come, not to become the insolvent phantom of tomorrow.”

Too bad we no longer have leading Republicans, or Democrats, warning of that danger.

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  1. #1 by Caveat on December 28, 2006 - 6:51 am

    That he feels like the coinage for my freedom is very simple minded. But, of course, he’s free to believe what the slave owners tell him. They have this particular ‘investment’. Now, if the ‘enemy’ were spying on us, rigging our elections, pardoning, propping-up or posthumously gilding murderous thieves, now there’d be a reason to fight. I Think.

  2. #2 by A Different CJ on December 29, 2006 - 3:45 pm

    Man, you have a man crush on CJ!!! That is all you talk about.

  3. #3 by Cliff on December 29, 2006 - 5:06 pm

    Man, we’re like blog ships passing in the night huh?

    CJ just an is an archetype. Look it up.

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