[corp-focus] Bowling for Baghdad
Robert Weissman
rob@essential.org
Fri, 18 Oct 2002 11:57:32 -0700
Bowling for Baghdad
By Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman
Last week, your nation's capital was a bit more surreal than usual.
First and foremost, there is the sniper.
And just when the sniper arrives in the neighborhood, here comes Michael
Moore with his much awaited critique of violence in America -- Bowling
for Columbine.
We have three words of advice: go see it.
In one scene, Moore, a lifetime member of the National Rifle
Association, goes to door to door in Toronto, Canada, doesn't knock, and
just walks in.
Apparently, in Canada, many people don't lock their doors.
This in a country, Canada, where there are 7 million guns for a
population of 33 million.
But in Canada there are fewer than 400 gun deaths a year.
In the United States, we hit 400 in two weeks -- that's 11,000 gun
deaths a year.
In the U.S., eight children under the age of 18 are killed by guns in
America every day.
Moore raises a disturbing question: if it's just the guns, stupid, then
how come Canadians are not slaughtering themselves the way we are
slaughtering ourselves?
This question takes Moore to Littleton, Colorado, the site of the
Columbine massacre, home to the war machine Lockheed Martin, the war
machine that sponsors the news on National Public Radio.
There he interviews a spokesperson for Lockheed Martin, who tells Moore
that the weapons the company builds there are used by the United States
for defensive purposes.
Moore then cues up the war footage and runs through the history of U.S.
aggression throughout the world -- from Central American, to the Middle
East, to Southeast Asia.
This juxtaposition of government and corporate violence with grainy film
from the Columbine school's security camera capturing young children
massacring young children drives home Moore's larger point -- that the
violence and duplicity in our society starts at the top.
Which brings us back to our nation's capital, where both parties'
leadership, in part at the urging of the military-industrial-complex,
gave the green light last week for a pre-emptive attack on Iraq.
We attended a press conference held by House Minority Leader Richard
Gephardt (D-Missouri), the day after Gephardt went to the White House,
stood by Bush, and gave the green light for war.
We had with us an editorial from that morning's St. Louis Post Dispatch
titled "Gephardt Caves." Our sentiment exactly.
In it, Gephardt's hometown paper said that the reason he sided with Bush
was because he wanted to be Speaker of the House, and then President.
(This pattern, by the way, followed for other Democratic presidential
hopefuls -- Tom Daschle (D-South Dakota), Hillary Clinton (D-New York),
John Kerry (D-Massachusetts), Joseph Lieberman (D-Connecticut), Diane
Feinstein (D-California), John Edwards (D-North Carolina) -- all of whom
voted with Bush on the war.)
All said it was not about politics -- not when young (American) lives
are at stake.
But the Post-Dispatch called Gephardt on it.
Gephardt "protests too much when he says he is rising about politics."
"He wants to be speaker of the House -- or president," the Post Dispatch
wrote. "He can't achieve either goal taking an unpopular stand against a
war against Saddam."
We asked Gephardt whether he wanted be speaker or President.
"That's irrelevant," he shot back.
Not.
We then went over to the White House, where Ari Fleischer was conducting
one of his press briefings.
We wanted to know about a two-sentence letter from Theodore Sorensen,
the former legal advisor to President John F. Kennedy, that was
published in the New York Times.
Sorensen wrote this:
"President Bush has not yet openly reprimanded his press secretary, Ari
Fleischer, for suggesting that 'a bullet' is the cheapest way of
accomplishing his goal of regime change in Iraq. Is it possible that the
United States now endorses for other countries a policy of presidential
assassination, the very epitome of terrorism, after our own tragic
experience with that despicable act?"
So, Ari, did the President reprimand you?
Ari says: "As far as that is concerned, on the policy, as you know -- I
think you were here when I said on the record that that is not -- and
people heard it the day I said it -- that is not a statement of
administration policy."
But did the President reprimand you for saying that?
Ari says: "I think I have made the views clear of where the White House
is on this."
Not.
We then head back over to the Congress, where the war-mongerer Senator
Lieberman was releasing a Senate Governmental Affairs report on why
Enron happened.
The conclusion: "All the public and private agencies that were supposed
to exercise oversight and protect investors failed miserably."
The report was especially critical of the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) for failing to review any of Enron's annual reports
after its 1997 filing. Before going over to the Lieberman briefing, we
rang up former SEC chair Arthur Levitt.
We asked Levitt what we should ask Lieberman.
"Ask him -- where was Lieberman?" Levitt told us. "He was busy tying up
the SEC in knots over auditors' independence, over the budget, and over
options accounting."
We put this to Lieberman.
Lieberman gets testy and shoots back:
"Well, I hope he didn't say that, and if he did, it is grossly unfair
and inaccurate."
Actually, quite fair and accurate.
Michael Moore is a political agitator.
Go to see his movie -- and take as many friends and family members with
you as possible.
Gephardt, Lieberman and Bush are political leaders.
Listen to them, and you can only get angry -- and then organize to kick
these guys out of office.
Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Corporate Crime
Reporter. Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based
Multinational Monitor, http://www.multinationalmonitor.org. They are
co-authors of Corporate Predators: The Hunt for MegaProfits and the
Attack on Democracy (Monroe, Maine: Common Courage Press, 1999; http://www.corporatepredators.org).
(c) Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman
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