I've finally achieved consistency in my life. Any person of average or above intelligence can predict what I will say next with unerring accuracy. And what I say will always be wrong.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

[ItsAllAboutMeMan] Fwd: [allstar] male hits celine dion ............. on youtube you've got to see this

 

Bait and switch.  The whole title is "male hits celine dion highest note titanic "my heart will go on" (zoorro) see more video"

I thought i was going to see somebody punch out Celine Dion (long overdue) - instead it's just some castrado singing that wretched song

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: afriandyvari82 <afriandyvari82@yahoo.com>
Date: Wed, Jul 22, 2009 at 7:34 AM
Subject: [allstar] male hits celine dion ............. on youtube you've got to see this
To: allstar@yahoogroups.com


 

"male hits celine dion ........." on youtube you've got to see this
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QHYAyAaSNs




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Tuesday, July 21, 2009

[ItsAllAboutMeMan] Re: I AM HONORED TO DO THIS...(maybe, baby)

 

This, like almost everything I've read about the ACLU in chain emails, is false:

http://www.snopes.com/politics/religion/cemetery.asp

I really don't understand the hostility to the ACLU - they support the civil liberties of everybody, secular and religious. They defend the rights of conservatives as well as liberals. See, for example:

http://blog.aclu.org/2009/06/18/aclu-sues-tsa-for-unlawful-detention-of-ron-pauls-campaign-for-liberty-treasurer/

The oppose the erosion of our constituional rights when they are under attack by liberals as well as conservatives:

http://criminaljustice.change.org/actions/view/please_reject_indefinite_detention

I don't know what part of the American Civil Liberties Union people don't like. Maybe the American part?  I hear there's a lot of anti-American feeling in the world today, I guess it's not surprising there are people inside the borders that don't like the American Way.  Maybe they'd like it better in Russia or China where they don't have anything like ACLU, where they arrest people for doing the things the ACLU tries to protect.  Or maybe the Civil part?  Maybe they'd prefer things if they were done the way the are in Honduras. Liberties?  Well, if we had a military government like in Honduras, I guess we wouldn't have to worry about liberty. 

> --- On Tue, 7/21/09, irishvio@aol.com <irishvio@aol.com> wrote:
>
> From: irishvio@aol.com <irishvio@aol.com>
> Subject: Fwd: I AM HONORED TO DO THIS
> To: redd2trvl2@bellsouth.net, bentley5@bellsouth.net, lori38654@yahoo.com, diannagarner@comcast.net, bevhale@hotmail.com, cjohnson@odysseymed.com, salist@bellsouth.net, munstermarci@comcast.net, cpm5356@aol.com, rct1352@jaxnet.net, bythespirit2007@yahoo.com
> Date: Tuesday, July 21, 2009, 10:03 AM
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Frank & Diane Brown <fgdmbrown@comcast.net>
> To: Amber Rice <a.rice@markdunning.com>; Judith Mills <jamills10@aristotle.net>; Melinda Hunley Coates <nmhunley@bellsouth.net>; Jewel Gaston <jj131@cableone.net>; Betty Cecil <IRISHVIO@aol.com>; Peggy Huff <peggyhuff@comcast.net>; Ronnie Brown <dziggetai@bellsouth.net>; Delight Reisanuer <delightreisanuer@hotmail.com>; Carolyn Brown <mcrb0517@comcast.net>
> Sent: Mon, Jul 20, 2009 6:27 pm
> Subject: Fw: Fw: I AM HONORED TO DO THIS
>
> Date: Monday, July 20, 2009, 8:55 AM
>
> I AM HONORED TO DO THIS
>
> Did you know that the ACLU has filed a suit to have all military cross-shaped headstones removed and another suit to end prayer from the military completely. They're making great progress. The Navy Chaplains can no longer mention Jesus' name in prayer thanks to the retched ACLU and our new administration.
>
> I'm not breaking this one. If I get it a 1000 times, I'll forward it a 1000 times!
>
> Let us pray...
>
> Prayer chain for our Military... Don't break it!
>
> Please send this on after a short prayer.. Prayer for our soldiers Don't break it!
>
> Prayer:
>
> 'Lord, hold our troops in your loving hands Protect them as they protect us Bless them and their families for the selfless acts they perform for us in our time of need. Amen.'
>
> Prayer Request: When you receive this, please stop for a moment and say a prayer for our troops around the world.
>
> There is nothing attached. Just send this to people in your address book.. Do not let it stop with you. Of all the gifts you could give a Marine, Soldier, Sailor, Airman, &others deployed in harm's way, prayer is the very best one.
>
> GOD BLESS YOU FOR PASSING IT ON!
> ________________________________
> ________________________________
> It's raining cats and dogs -- Come to PawNation, a place where pets rule!
>
> ________________________________
> One-click access to hundreds of free games. Get the Games.com Toolbar.



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Sunday, July 19, 2009

[ItsAllAboutMeMan] Will no one rid me of this turbulent glurge?

 

The real story can be found at:  http://www.snopes.com/music/songs/taps.asp

On Sun, Jul 19, 2009 at 11:21 AM, Rick REED <bythespirit2007@yahoo.com> wrote:


--- On Sat, 7/18/09, irishvio@aol.com <irishvio@aol.com> wrote:

From: irishvio@aol.com <irishvio@aol.com>
Subject: Fwd: Taps
To: redd2trvl2@bellsouth.net, diannagarner@comcast.net, bevhale@hotmail.com, cjohnson@odysseymed.com, salist@bellsouth.net, cpm5356@aol.com, rct1352@jaxnet.net, bythespirit2007@yahoo.com
Date: Saturday, July 18, 2009, 9:59 AM




-----Original Message-----
From: Frank & Diane Brown <fgdmbrown@comcast.net>
To: Peggy Fletcher <pgf180@earthlink.net>; Peggy Huff <peggyhuff@comcast.net>; Jewel Gaston <jj131@cableone.net>; Ronnie Brown <dziggetai@bellsouth.net>; Carolyn Brown <mcrb0517@comcast.net>; Delight Reisanuer <delightreisanuer@hotmail.com>; Betty Cecil <IRISHVIO@aol.com>; Melinda Hunley Coates <nmhunley@bellsouth.net>
Sent: Fri, Jul 17, 2009 6:23 pm
Subject: Fw: Taps

 



 
I forgot the words.........for that I am ashamed.........
 
RjR




 


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
If
any of you have ever been to a military
funeral in which taps was played;
this brings out a new meaning of it.
Here
is something Every American should know. Until I
read this, I didn't know, but I checked it out
and it's true: 
 
We
in the  United States  have all heard
the haunting song, 'Taps.' It's the song that
gives us the lump in our throats and usually
tears in our eyes.


 
But,
do you know the story behind the song?  If
not, I think you will be interested to find out
about its humble beginnings. 
 
 
Reportedly,
it all began in 1862 during the Civil War,
when Union Army
Captain Robert Ellicombe was with
his men near Harrison's Landing in 
Virginia .  The Confederate Army was
on the other side of the narrow strip of land.


During
the night, Captain Ellicombe heard the moans of
a soldier who lay severely wounded on the field.
 Not knowing if it was a  Union
 or Confederate soldier, the Captain
decided to risk his life and bring the stricken
man back for medical attention. Crawling on his
stomach through the gunfire, the Captain reached
the stricken soldier and began pulling him
toward his encampment. 
 
When
the Captain finally reached his own lines, he
discovered it was actually a Confederate
soldier, but the soldier was dead. 
 
The
Captain lit a lantern and suddenly caught his
breath and went numb with shock.  In the
dim light, he saw the face of the soldier. It
was his own son. The boy had been studying music
in the South when the war broke out.
 Without telling his father, the boy
enlisted in the Confederate Army. 
 
 
The
following morning, heartbroken, the father asked
permission of his superiors to give his son a
full military burial, despite his enemy status.
His request was only partially granted.
The
Captain had asked if he could have a group of
Army band members play a funeral dirge for his
son at the funeral. 
The
request was turned down since the soldier was a
Confederate. 
 
But,
out of respect for the father, they did say they
could give him only one musician.


 
The
Captain chose a bugler.  He asked the
bugler to play a series of musical notes he had
found on a piece of paper in the pocket of the
dead youth's uniform. 
 
This
wish was granted. 
 
The
haunting melody, we now know as 'Taps' used
at military
funerals was born. 
 
 
The
words are: 


Day
is done. 

Gone
the sun. 

From
the lakes 
 
From
the hills. 
  
From
the sky. 

All
is well.   

Safely
rest.   

God
is nigh. 


Fading
light. 

Dims
the sight.
 
And
a star. 

Gems
the sky.
 
Gleaming
bright. 
  
From
afar. 
  
Drawing
nigh. 
  
Falls
the night. 


Thanks
and praise. 
  
For
our days. 
  
Neath
the sun 
  
Neath
the stars. 
  
Neath
the sky
 
As
we go. 

This
we know. 
  
God
is nigh


 
I
too have felt the chills while listening to
'Taps' but I have never seen all the words to
the song until now.  I didn't even know
there was more than one verse .  I also
never knew the story behind the song and I
didn't know if you had either so I thought I'd
pass it along. 
 
I
now have an even deeper respect for the song
than I did before. 
 
Remember
Those Lost and Harmed While Serving Their
Country.


  
 
Also
Remember Those Who Have Served And Returned; and
for those presently serving in the Armed
Forces.

Please
send this on after a short prayer.
Make
this a Prayer
wheel for our soldiers....please
don't break it .  
 

I
didn't!
RjR
 
 
 
 



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Sunday, July 05, 2009

[ItsAllAboutMeMan] hey from Botswana



Watching "When We Were Kings" on TV.  Profoundly depressing.  Dictators and criminals get together to stage a fight between two men beating the hell out of each other.  B B King, perhaps the most boring "entertainer" to ever take the stage, and James Brown, the most overrated, performed.  That evil, money grubbing Republican sings "we're going to have a funky good time" 160 times in a row, and people proclaim him a genius.

Narration from useless wastes of air George Plimpton and Norman Mailer, who mericifully are no longer wasting it.  Mailer and his stupid race and sex shit is especially embarrassing.  He was a relic, a holdover from a previous age.

I was impressd with what a supreme asshole Mohammad Ali was.  and that creepy little slime Spike Lee.

The only person that comes off as any sort of decent person is George Foreman.  It was inexplicable how Ali could portray this as a fight of good against evil, black against white, god against the devil - and get so many people to agree with his sick and pathetic delusions.  

I'm glad Foreman still seems to have his health, he has a sense of humor, he has his grills... in some ways the world is a better place. I hope we continue to progress away frm the kind of world this documentary glorifies.  Let the dead bury the dead.  Let the living move on.



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[ItsAllAboutMeMan] hey from Botswana



Watching "When We Were Kings" on TV.  Profoundly depressing.  Dictators and criminals get together to stage a fight between two men beating the hell out of each other.  B B King, perhaps the most boring "entertainer" to ever take the stage, and James Brown, the most overrated, performed.  That evil, money grubbing Republican sings "we're going to have a funky good time" 160 times in a row, and people proclaim him a genius.

Narration from useless wastes of air George Plimpton and Norman Mailer, who mericifully are no longer wasting it.  Mailer and his stupid race and sex shit is especially embarrassing.  He was a relic, a holdover from a previous age.

I was impressd with what a supreme asshole Mohammad Ali was.  and that creepy little slime Spike Lee.

The only person that comes off as any sort of decent person is George Foreman.  It was inexplicable how Ali could portray this as a fight of good against evil, black against white, god against the devil - and get so many people to agree with his sick and pathetic delusions.  

I'm glad Foreman still seems to have his health, he has a sense of humor, he has his grills... in some ways the world is a better place. I hope we continue to progress away frm the kind of world this documentary glorifies.  Let the dead bury the dead.  Let the living move on.



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[ItsAllAboutMeMan] hey from Botswana



Watching "When We Were Kings" on TV.  Profoundly depressing.  Dictators and criminals get together to stage a fight between two men beating the hell out of each other.  B B King, perhaps the most boring "entertainer" to ever take the stage, and James Brown, the most overrated, performed.  That evil, money grubbing Republican sings "we're going to have a funky good time" 160 times in a row, and people proclaim him a genius.

Narration from useless wastes of air George Plimpton and Norman Mailer, who mericifully are no longer wasting it.  Mailer and his stupid race and sex shit is especially embarrassing.  He was a relic, a holdover from a previous age.

I was impressd with what a supreme asshole Mohammad Ali was.  and that creepy little slime Spike Lee.

The only person that comes off as any sort of decent person is George Foreman.  It was inexplicable how Ali could portray this as a fight of good against evil, black against white, god against the devil - and get so many people to agree with his sick and pathetic delusions.  

I'm glad Foreman still seems to have his health, he has a sense of humor, he has his grills... in some ways the world is a better place. I hope we continue to progress away frm the kind of world this documentary glorifies.  Let the dead bury the dead.  Let the living move on.



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Saturday, July 04, 2009

[ItsAllAboutMeMan] Happy 4th of July, Everyone!



Please keep this going!
Pass this around the World .
Then pass it around again.  It says it all, for all of us .
 

Thanks!



---------- Forwarded message ----------

Imperial Culture and Moral Absurdity in the Age of Obama: From Teheran and Bala Boluk to New York, Bagua, and Tegucigalpa
 
By Paul Street
 
During a concert at Chicago's United Center last May 12th, Bruce Springsteen observed that "sometimes it seems like the more things change the more they stay the same."  He was talking about the persistence and indeed the deepening of poverty and inequality in the United States, where financial parasites and perpetrators receive untold billions of taxpayer dollars while millions are pushed further into destitution, their fate worsened by a regressive welfare "reform" (elimination) that "progressive" President Barack Obama has repeatedly praised as a great bipartisan policy triumph. 
  
 WORTHY AND UNWORTHY VICTIMS
 
Among numerous other examples of "things stay[ing] the same," the Boss (Springsteen, that is) might also have mentioned the deeply ingrained tendency of top U.S. politicians and dominant U.S. media to make unstated but easily discernible distinctions between "worthy" and "unworthy victims" in world affairs.

 "Worthy victims" are killed by officially designated enemies of the inherently virtuous United States. Their deaths are reported in ways meant to elicit sympathy and to encourage outrage against their murderers. Some of them can become martyrs. 

 "Unworthy victims" perish at the hands of the intrinsically honorable United States and/or its officially designated allies and clients.  They die anonymously and without fanfare, passing down the memory hole devoid of sympathy in dominant U.S. media and political culture, where their deaths often register little more than those of ants crushed beneath the wheels of a Bradley Fighting Vehicle or (to mention another great weapon of empire) a CNN camera truck.

 Pop quiz question #1, fellow American: who is Neda Soltan? Who killed her?

 Yes, that's right. She's the beautiful 26 year-old woman who was murdered on June 20th by (the story goes) a government sniper engaged in the repression of protests against a rigged election in Iran.

 You knew that right away. Of course you did. Neda was all over U.S. television as a global democracy symbol for days - a ubiquitous and potent media image until she was knocked off center stage by the ongoing death drama of the mysterious American pop icon Michael Jackson (the coverage of which most Americans find "excessive").  Neda was murdered by an officially designated U.S. enemy state.

 No less an American than President Obama said he had watched the graphic Internet video of Neda's death. "While this loss is raw and extraordinarily painful, we also know this: those who stand up for justice are always on the right side of history," Obama said. The president called the video "heartbreaking."

 "I think that anybody who sees it knows that there's something fundamentally unjust about that," he claimed.  "No iron fist is strong enough to shut off the world from bearing witness."

Pop quiz question # 2: name a single person among the more than ten dozen who died in the western Afghanistan village of Grani in Bala Boluk district in the province of Farah in the first week of last May. Ninety-three of the people killed were children, many blown literally to bits.  Angry and grieving villagers put some of the victims' body parts in pickup trucks and wagons and hauled them for public viewing to provincial headquarters. On May 4th, Dr Atiqullah, a Grani resident, told Pajhwok Afghan News that "bombardment destroyed the whole village and some of the mutilated bodies were beyond recognition. He said they had so far retrieved 123 dead bodies from beneath the debris of the destroyed homes by using tractors."

Can't come up with a name? Of course you can't. The civilians in question were slaughtered from the sky by the world's only Superpower - the United States.  They did not merit meaningful identification and personalization by U.S. communication authorities.

TOO "GOOD" TO APOLOGIZE

They and the many thousands of Afghans (and Iraqis and Pakistanis) that "we") have butchered in recent years are unworthy victims. They died tragically - "regrettably" but inescapably - as "collateral damage" in the military campaigns of a morally splendid nation that seeks to do noble things - to spread freedom, peace, prosperity, and democracy - in the world. As President Barack Obama told CNN's Candy Crowley last July, the U.S. should never apologize for any its actions - even for its sporadic "mistakes" (Obama has always refused to apply the word "crime" to any of Uncle Sam's many past transgressions) - on the global stage.  This, he explained, is because America is a "force for good" in the world.

As Barack Obama's "loved" philosopher the establishment theologian Reinhold Niebuhr, told the U.S. imperial class after World War Two: "the paradox of grace" means that U.S. policymakers cannot forsake their sacred purpose of advancing goodness on Earth if they shirk from their intimately related duty to commit sin. You can't make an omelet without breaking eggs.

If America's overflowing uprightness leads its benevolent tanks, helicopters, bombers, unmanned aerial vehicles to "occasionally" squash civilian insects abroad, that's a shame. But "collateral damage" is unavoidable when you are a Superpower working for peace, freedom, and the material and spiritual betterment of humanity. As War Democrat Bill Clinton's Secretary of State Madeline Albright explained in the fall of 1999, seven months after the U.S. initiated deadly bombing runs over Belgrade, "The United States is good.  We try to do our best everywhere."

When asked about the death of more than half a million Iraqi children due to U.S.-led "economic sanctions," Albright told CBS television that "we think the price is worth paying" to advance the United States' fundamentally honorable policy goals. 

Consistent with his repeatedly stated "American exceptionalist" faith in the unmatched moral purity of U.S. foreign policy and national character, Barack Obama has consistently (as candidate and as president) proclaimed the United States' criminal assault on Afghanistan (October 2001 to ????) to be a "good," "just" and "proper" war.
 
The dominant U.S. corporate war and entertainment media has not seen fit to question this judgment even as hundreds of innocent civilian Afghans and Pakistanis perish in the face of Obama's expanded and re-branded "global war on terror," replete with a stepping up of "targeted assassinations," the appointment of a notorious death squad ("special ops") leader (Stanley A. McChrystal) to the head of the newly merged "Af-Pak" war theater, and the escalation of provocative drone attacks (executed by distant technicians in air-conditioned command centers in California) in South Asia

Neither Obama nor his "mainstream" media allies were about to "bear witness" to the "unfortunate" massacre of civilian creatures in remote Afghan villages. "Shit" like the aerial dismemberment of dozens of Pashtun children "Happens" when you are on a global mission from God and/or History. Such is the "paradox of grace." Meanwhile, Obama's Pentagon tried to pin the unspeakable carnage from the heavens in Bala Boluk on..."Taliban grenades."

SCARING NEW YORKERS V. KILLING AFGHANS

Around the same time that Grani's villagers collected the remains of their U.S.-pulverized children, Obama and his Republican Secretary of Defense Robert Gates apologized to the American people and fired a White House official.  They did this because a late-April presidential photo shoot above Manhattan went terribly bad.  The president's plane, "Air Force One," had flown far too low over the island with a fighter jet in tow, terrifying New York City residents and office-workers by reminding them of 9/11.

Scaring New Yorkers and stirring up the ghosts of 9/11 elicited an executive branch apology and the discharge of a staffer. Actually killing more than 100 Afghan civilians did not require public contrition or a single firing. The imperial gendarmes even got to make up childish tales about how so many civilians died in Grani ("the Taliban did it") - stories that were taken seriously by "mainstream" media.

Such are the ironies and burdens of imperial culture!

Of course, 9/11's U.S. dead are the ultimate worthy victims in reigning U.S. political/media culture.  The New York Times ran a touching series of photos and biographies of every 9/11 victim they could over many months in 2002. No such personalization and respect has ever been or ever will be granted by U.S. media to any of the much larger number of Arabs and Pashtuns and others who have died prematurely because of U.S. actions, including more than 1 million Iraqis (killed by another illegal invasion Obama and his many fellow War Democrats are sustaining in the name of peace and "withdrawal") who have perished since March of 2003.

The unworthy victims of Superpower's rogue behavior die in mass anonymity, unlike Neda, whose name Obama knows. Apparently some kind of iron fist and/or velvet glove is powerful enough to "shut off" most U.S. citizens and the U.S. president from "bearing witness" to the huge number of Southwest and South Asians that "good" America has seen fit to liberate from existence since and before 9/11. There's "something fundamentally unjust about that" (to use Obama's words on the murder of Neda).

Such nationally narcissistic absence of concern is no small part of the richly bipartisan imperial-cultural matrix that did so much to cause the jetliner attacks of 2001.  Until the perverse dichotomy between "worthy" and "unworthy victims" - along with much else in the imperial mindset and structure - is overcome, we can expect more and perhaps bigger attacks on the "homeland."

INVISIBLE VICTIMS IN PERU

Let us turn now to some recent events in Superpower's hemispheric "backyard."  Pop Quiz # 3: Name any among the dozens of indigenous citizens and activists massacred by police while protesting oil and mining projects in the northern Peruvian Amazonian province of Bagua in the first week of June 2009.

Find a Neda among the forty people, including three children, who died at the hands of police on June 6 and June 7.  The indigenous Peruvians were trying to protect Amazonian ecology and their social and physical health from multinational corporations seeking to "move forward" under a series of Peruvian government decrees passed to implement a "Free Trade Agreement" with the U.S.  The incident was only weakly covered in dominant U.S. media, which failed to report the predominantly state-inflicted nature of the violence and left out the underlying corporate-globalizationist and eco-cidal context behind the conflict. Also left out: presidential candidate Barack Obama's support for the anti-labor/anti-environment/anti-indigenous US-Peru Free Trade Agreement - the extension of the global investors' rights bill, the North American Free Trade Agreement to Peru - in the fall and winter of 2007. Candidate Obama falsely claimed that the bill contained important labor and environmental protections - a deception for which he was strongly criticized by the tragic John Edwards.

You'll have to do some research to get any names of the Bagua dead, fellow American. They died in the usual scornful anonymity conferred upon the unworthy victims who are liquidated by U.S. clients and on the wrong side of U.S. global policy.

A RECENT OPPORTUNITY TO BE GOOD IN SUPERPOWER'S OWN BACKYARD

Last week Obama got another chance to reject the childish notion that righteous Uncle Sam might express some contrition for the murder and mayhem he causes across the world.  During a White House visit by Chile's president Michele Bachelet, a Chilean reporter asked Obama if he might tender a U.S. state apology for the American Empire's critical role in the September 11, 1973 coup that overthrew that country's elected government and installed the murderous right-wing dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet.  Obama refused, explaining that "I'm interested in going forward, not looking backward" (sound familiar?).  The president added that "the United States has been an enormous force for good in the world" even if "there have been times where we've made mistakes."

The reporter did not follow up to press the president on the "enormous [U.S.] good[ness]" involved in (to mention a few key past and ongoing "mistakes" like murdering 3 million Indochinese during the 1960s and 1970s, killing a million Iraqis with "economic sanctions" during the 1990s, making a grossly outsized contribution to global warming and other forms of planetary pollution,  incarcerating more then 2 million of its own citizens, sustaining dictatorships in Egypt and Saudi Arabia, accounting for nearly half the world's military spending, and sustaining an empire that includes more than 760 bases located across more than 130 countries in a planet where more than 2 billion people live and die on less than a dollar a day, thanks to a world capitalist system that the U.S. government has long sought to protect and expand with, well, an iron fist when "necessary."

Just this last week, events in Honduras have offered Obama a shining opportunity to "go forward" as  "an enormous force for good in the world" by acting decisively against the military officials who executed a coup against Honduras' democratically elected, left-leaning president Manuel Zelaya. The coup was (quite naturally) carried out by U.S.-trained and U.S.-funded military forces and conducted with U.S.-supplied military equipment. Obama possesses the power to restore Zelaya to his rightful office in Honduras, a nation whose government and economy has long been exceedingly dependent on the U.S. More than that, there are disturbing questions about Washington's role leading up to the coup. As the incisive left journalist and author Jeremy Scahill noted Monday morning:

"It is impossible to imagine that the US was not aware that the coup was in the works. In fact, this was basically confirmed by The New York Times in Monday's paper...While the US has issued heavily-qualified statements critical of the coup—in the aftermath of the events in Honduras—the US could have flexed its tremendous economic muscle before the coup and told the military coup plotters to stand down. The US ties to the Honduran military and political establishment run far too deep for all of this to have gone down without at least tacit support or the turning of a blind eye by some US political or military official(s)."

"Here are some facts to consider: the US is the top trading partner for Honduras. The coup plotters/supporters in the Honduran Congress are supporters of the 'free trade agreements' Washington has imposed on the region. The coup leaders view their actions, in part, as a rejection of Hugo Chavez's influence in Honduras and with Zelaya and an embrace of the United States and Washington's 'vision' for the region. Obama and the US military could likely have halted this coup with a simple series of phone calls."

According to the noted Latin American historian Greg Gandin one day after the coup, "The Honduran military is effectively a subsidiary of the United States government. Honduras, as a whole, if any Latin American country is fully owned by the United States, it's Honduras. Its economy is wholly based on trade, foreign aid and remittances. So if the US is opposed to this coup going forward, it won't go forward. Zelaya will return, if the United States—if Obama and Hillary Clinton are sincere in their statements about returning Zelaya to power."

On Sunday, Obama expressed "deep concern" regarding "the detention and expulsion of President Mel Zelaya" and called on "all political and social actors in Honduras to respect democratic norms" and the "the rule of law" so as to resolve "existing tensions and disputes... through dialogue free from any outside interference."

Still, the White House, which keeps more than 500 troops and a number of planes and helicopters at a Honduran base, has refused to officially/legally declare the removal of Zelaya "a coup."  Making such a declaration would trigger (under the Foreign Assistance Act) a cutoff of tens of millions of dollars of U.S. aid to the Central American nation. According to Reuters, "The [U.S.] State Department has requested $68.2 million in aid for fiscal year 2010 [for Honduras], which begins on October 1, up from $43.2 million in the current fiscal year and $40.5 million a year earlier."

John Negroponte, a former U.S. ambassador to Honduras and a leading, blood-soaked figure in U.S. coordination of mass-murderous right-wing state terror across Central America under Ronald Reagan, told the Washington Post that the Obama administration's disinclination to fully acknowledge the reality of recent events "appeared to reflect reluctance to see Zelaya returned unconditionally to power." 

Will the U.S. work seriously for Zelaya's return? Obama's Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said, "We haven't laid out any demands that we're insisting on, because we're working with others on behalf of our ultimate objectives."  In a Monday briefing with reporters, U.S. Statement spokesman Ian Kelly had an interesting exchange with the press:

MR. KELLY:  I believe that [the coup] is illegal, yes. I mean, I don't think that there was - look.....As I say, I am not an international lawyer. But this was not a democratic solution to some of the conflicts that we saw leading up to yesterday's events. And I think that's - that's our real issue with this, and I think that's the issue with all of our colleagues in the Organization of American States

QUESTION: Is it fair to say that the Secretary said, look, as a practical matter, this is a coup, but we're not yet making that formal legal determination, which would, of course, then trigger the cutoff of most aid.

MR. KELLY: Yeah.

QUESTION: That you were essentially trying to create some space to try to reach a negotiated outcome?

MR. KELLY: I think that we - right now, we're calling on all parties to come to a negotiated solution

Superpower could have prevented the coup in advance with some phone calls and well-placed threats. With just a tiny portion of the military and political force it pours into sustaining illegal invasions and occupations (Iraq, Afghanistan, and Palestine) and dictatorships in oil-rich Southwest Asia, it could (in line with majority Latin American and global opinion)quickly restore the democratically elected president to power in Honduras.

AGAINST INDEPENDENT DEVELOPMENT

Expect some sort of "negotiated solution." Confronting a changed, left-leaning balance of forces and opinion in Latin America, the White House will probably bring Zelaya back on a conditional basis (think Bill Clinton and Haiti's Jean Bertrand Aristide in 1994), re-installing him on more disciplined, U.S.-friendly terms. The intermediate resolution the White House is seeking certainly falls short of what would be expected from an actual "enormous force for good in the world" and fits nicely with the imperial mindset articulated in Obama's aforementioned (and deeply conservative) Audacity of Hope:


"Of course there are those who would argue with my starting premise - that any global system built in America's image can alleviate misery in poorer countries...Rather than conform to America's rules, the argument goes, other countries should resist America's efforts to expand its hegemony; instead, they should follow their own path to development, taking their lead from left-leaning populists like Venezuela's Hugo Chavez, or turning to more traditional principles of social organization, like Islamic law...I believe [Chavez and other] critics [of the U.S. and neoliberalism]  are wrong...The system of [so-called - P.S.] free markets and [so-called -P.S. ] liberal democracy... offer[s] people around the world their best chance at a better life" (Obama, Audacity of Hope, p. 315).

Global capitalism does no such thing, of course. Candidate Obama's reflections ended on a profoundly false judgment, properly rejected by Mel Zelaya, who came into office in early 2006 as a center-right politician but who subsequently moved left and shifted his desperately impoverished and U.S.-controlled nation into Hugo Chavez's socialist "Bolivarian Alternative for the America's" (ALBA).
 
Truth be told, the not-so "free market" and "liberal-democratic" system of state capitalism and corporate-managed democracy is ever-more obviously opposed to ordinary peoples' "chance at better life" inside the United States itself.  But that's another if intimately related topic in the saga of American Empire and Inequality Incorporated.

Paul Street (paulsrtreet99@yahoo.com) is the author of many essays, reviews, chapters, speeches, and books, including Empire and Inequality: American and the World Since 9/11 (Paradigm, 2004), Racial Oppression in the Global Metropolis (Rowman & Littlefield, 2007), and Barack Obama and the Future of American Politics: www.paradigmpublishers.com/Books/BookDetail.aspx?productID=186987

http://www.zcommunications.org/znet/viewArticle/21841
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