Corporate imperial militarism controls U.S. society and wages destructive occupations abroad to serve the capitalist interests of the war-making, armaments manufacturing class whose bombs eradicate human beings for profit.
Externalized racism and depleted uranium radiation warfare smashes the aspirations of target victims in Afghanistan and Iraq, CIA drones slaughter civilians mercilessly in Pakistan, napalm and agent orange used in Vietnam is still effecting children with birth defects, hundreds of thousands in El Salvador and Guatemala miss their disappeared relatives that the U.S. military and CIA trained Latin American dictators and their police constabularies in racist anticommunist doctrine to murder and justify the imperial extraction of natural resources to protect the elite wealthy classes and rich landowner death squads using secret police assassination methods.
The CIA trains murderous guerillas as part of proxy sabotage whenever a government the U.S. imperial corporate war masters don’t like achieves advances in health care and education for their population while simultaneously offering land reform or industrialization beneficial to the population and plentiful jobs. Whether CIA-contra proxy mercenary guerilla insurgent violence against teachers, priests and peasant farmers supporting the Sandinista revolutionary government or NATO massive aerial bombardment of infrastructure and terrorization of the Libyan African population with jihadist barbaric killers, the goal is to undermine systems that are functioning for the majority of people and therefore undermining the control of the U.S imperial wall street armaments manufacturing oil mafia elite. The U.S. massacre armaments machine didn’t like the Sandinista revolution because El Salvador and Guatemala were stable customers of armaments to terrorize their populations and one leftist regime left standing in the hemisphere perhaps might result in the strengthening of revolutionary upheavals in the neighboring colonies and therefore represented a threat to the sale of counterinsurgency equipment to these nations. Gaddafi’s Libya featured a free health care system, free university, public infrastructure projects for his population and this leader threatened to demand payment of his nations’ oil in gold rather than the dollar.
These nations are seen as targets for obliteration and destruction of the U.S. military corporate war imperial NATO masters who thrive on death and arms sales to profit their personal bank accounts.
The destructive apparatus known as the U.S. war machine builds bases all around the world for the private corporate profit of Halliburton, Kellogg Brown and Root and maintains concentration camps with emaciated prisoners cleared for release at Guantanamo who are being force fed and choked to maintain the profitability of running overseas prison garrisons for the sake of a bloody empire run by the rich.
Lies make money. Lies are an immensely profitable undertaking. A lying industry prevails in the United State serving the corporate military war factory interests that enriches the capitalist ruling class. Televisions and armaments factories are running in smooth operating precision as the conditioned masses are left to stare at their leaders who threaten to crash the global financial system and lie about a lack of funds for the civilian government while innocent civilians are blown to smithereens with National Security Agency reconnaissance assisted CIA-military piloted drones from the skies during a shutdown of basic services for the poor.
Mass media deception is a perpetual function of the armaments industry as it uses the avenues of print, electronic television and radio to sell the homicidal lies of the arms merchants who wanted to lay waste to Syria as part of the NATO/U.S. imperialist capitalist destruction of this land with Tomahawk missiles. A study of the mass media on http://public-accountability.org/ reveals that MSNBC, Fox, PBS and CNN television anchors interviewing former Bush national security advisor Stephen Hadley, who made various arguments in favor of a U.S./NATO military attack against Syria, failed to mention that he is a director of Raytheon which manufactures the Tomahawk missile. Raytheon paid Hadley $128,500 in compensation last year, and he is owner of 11,477 shares of stock in this armaments company, worth $900,000. Out of the four times Hadley’s arguments for U.S. military violence against Syria were featured in mainstream media, including three televised interviews—on Bloomberg TV, Fox News and CNN and once in a Washington Post opinion editorial, media anchor or editorial personnel responsible for identifying a guest experts’ official title only mentioned his position as former national security advisor and nothing about his war profiteering affiliation with Raytheon.
A variety of other guests which appeared on the mainstream corporate networks and advocated for militarized violence against Syria during the attempted run-up for war are affiliated with munitions company or “defense” or intelligence contracting interests. The study shows that 22 different commentators with connections to defense and intelligence contractors or defense related investment firms made 111 appearances as quoted guests, experts on news shows or opinion editorial authors and mass media news personnel made only 13 attempts within the various media outlets to disclose the guest commentators’ connections to the military-intelligence weapons industry. Former Centcom commander Anthony Zinni expressed support for attacking Syria with NATO/U.S weaponry three times on CNN, once on CBS This Morning and in an opinion editorial in the Washington Post and none of the media personnel working in an interviewer or editorial capacity for these outlets mentioned that he is an outside director of BAE Systems, the third largest military services company in the world, based in London.
So much for the mass media serving as a fourth branch of government to check the powerful when reporters at media outlets that reach the vast majority of the population are completely bought off by the armaments industry and reporters who are actually doing their jobs are repeatedly spied on and more whistleblowers are persecuted than any other administration combined under the Espionage act of 1917.
Armament factory military corporate war interests of the U.S. Pentagon war machine cause Pakistani teenagers to commit suicide due to the ever present trauma of assassination squad drones hovering over their land. What does this say about the moral level of the United States when because of a lack of investment in socially uplifting employment prospects, students are now being channeled into this industry tainted with the blood of innocent men, women and children because of the massive influence of the military industrial armaments complex in shaping the educational institutions that are the main determinant in producing the array of occupations, industries goods and services that we call the economy? Newspaper columnists blurt obscenities of internalized racism such as murdering Pakistani children is better from an American standpoint because they could somehow harm U.S. citizens in the future. How many of these future drone operators will work for humanitarian purposes such as rescuing people during disasters or delivering food to the homeless versus violating the fourth amendment of U.S. citizens with a constitutional right from unreasonable searches and seizures and, worse yet, political assassination of activists deemed criminals by an elite corporate militarized cabal? Perhaps this is an unknown, but we might ask how many of them are affiliated with progressive social causes or anti-racist, ant-imperialist views or know that imperialism is a process by which military empires extract natural resources for corporate profit as is the case with Afghanistan’s lithium as well as geostrategic positioning for oil pipelines and that U.S./NATO/ CIA military attacks against target nations always involve the indiscriminate slaughter of civilians.
Thirty thousand drones will fly over the U.S. by 2020. This war-surveillance machinery is already used in a global assassination campaign that denies both foreigners and U.S. citizens the right of trial before execution. Surveillance drones deny the target freedom from unreasonable searches, seizures and surveillance under the fourth amendment, domestically, not to mention the national sovereignty and lives of the targets of U.S-CIA-military imperial violence including scores of innocent civilians deemed “collateral damage,” or worse yet, associates of the target deliberately murdered for political assassination purposes. U.S. Imperialism—it’s no delight for the people of the world and increasingly not for U.S. citizens unaffiliated with the war machine either.
William C. Lewis is a journalist, researcher and writer from Yreka California.
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APPENDIX
If there is one clear winner in the muddled war going on in Libya, it is the Raytheon Corporation. Raytheon sells the Tomahawk cruise missile to the United States government with a price tag of more than $1 million per missile. When the arsenal of American cruise missiles needs replacing, Raytheon will supply them at a considerable profit. Raytheon has seen its revenue climb for four years straight, and since the beginning of the year its stock price has climbed 9.4%.
There is a price to war. Yes, people are blown to bits. Yes, children will lose their legs. But Raytheon will have to pay a price as well, measured in campaign contributions. Over the past decade, Raytheon’s investment in politicians through PAC campaign contributions has exploded, you might say, nearly tenfold:
In the first two months of this 2011 alone, the following members of Congress were recipients of Raytheon’s largesse:
The saddest part is that most American politicians are cheap prostitutes. Consider that just a single corporation like Raytheon makes billions of dollars in profits, yet a paltry 3 million can suffice to buy all the votes it needs. (And this is a 10-fold increase in 20 years!) Note also that the cheap bastards come from both parties, the disease is completely bipartisan.—Eds
Senators:
Sen. John Barrasso (Republican-WY)
Sen. Richard Burr (Republican-NC)
Sen. Maria Cantwell (Democrat-WA)
Sen. Benjamin Cardin (Democrat-MD)
Sen. Robert Casey (Democrat-PA)
Sen. Susan Collins (Republican-ME)
Sen. Bob Corker (Republican-TN)
Sen. John Cornyn (Republican-TX)
Sen. Richard Durbin (Democrat-IL)
Sen. Dianne Feinstein (Democrat-CA)
Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (Democrat-NY)
Sen. Orrin Hatch (Republican-UT)
Sen. Richard Lugar (Republican-IN)
Sen. Barbara Mikulski (Democrat-MD)
Sen. Bill Nelson (Democrat-FL)
Sen. Ben Nelson (Democrat-NE)
Sen. Mark Pryor (Democrat-AR)
Sen. James Risch (Republican-ID)
Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (Democrat-NH)
Sen. Richard Shelby (Republican-AL)
Sen. Olympia Snowe (Republican-ME)
Sen. Jon Tester (Democrat-MT)
Sen. Mark Udall (Democrat-CO)
Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (Democrat-RI)
Sen. Roger Wicker (Republican-MS)
Representatives:
Rep. Robert Aderholt (Republican-AL, District 4)
Rep. Todd Akin (Republican-MO, District 2)
Rep. Charles Bass (Republican-NH, District 2)
Rep. Howard Berman (Democrat-CA, District 28)
Rep. John Boehner (Republican-OH, District 8 )
Rep. Dan Boren (Democrat-OK, District 2)
Rep. Mo Brooks (Republican-AL, District 5)
Rep. Ken Calvert (Republican-CA, District 44)
Rep. David Camp (Republican-MI, District 4)
Rep. Eric Cantor (Republican-VA, District 7)
Rep. Lois Capps (Democrat-CA, District 23)
Rep. Michael Capuano (Democrat-MA, District 8 )
Rep. Russ Carnahan (Democrat-MO, District 3)
Rep. David Cicilline (Democrat-RI, District 1)
Rep. James Clyburn (Democrat-SC, District 6)
Rep. Tom Cole (Republican-OK, District 4)
Rep. Michael Conaway (Republican-TX, District 11)
Rep. Gerald Connolly (Democrat-VA, District 11)
Rep. Elijah Cummings (Democrat-MD, District 7)
Rep. Geoff Davis (Republican-KY, District 4)
Rep. Peter DeFazio (Democrat-OR, District 4)
Rep. Charles Dent (Republican-PA, District 15)
Rep. Norman Dicks (Democrat-WA, District 6)
Rep. Jeff Duncan (Republican-SC, District 3)
Rep. Donna Edwards (Democrat-MD, District 4)
Rep. Chuck Fleischmann (Republican-TN, District 3)
Rep. John Fleming (Republican-LA, District 4)
Rep. Randy Forbes (Republican-VA, District 4)
Rep. Jim Gerlach (Republican-PA, District 6)
Rep. Tim Griffin (Republican-AR, District 2)
Rep. Frank Guinta (Republican-NH, District 1)
Rep. Brett Guthrie (Republican-KY, District 2)
Rep. Gregg Harper (Republican-MS, District 3)
Rep. Duncan Hunter (Republican-CA, District 52)
Rep. Darrell Issa (Republican-CA, District 49)
Rep. Peter King (Republican-NY, District 3)
Rep. Larry Kissell (Democrat-NC, District 8 )
Rep. Daniel Lipinski (Democrat-IL, District 3)
Rep. Billy Long (Republican-MO, District 7)
Rep. Donald Manzullo (Republican-IL, District 16)
Rep. Michael McCaul (Republican-TX, District 10)
Rep. James McGovern (Democrat-MA, District 3)
Rep. Mike McIntyre (Democrat-NC, District 7)
Rep. Howard McKeon (Republican-CA, District 25)
Rep. John Mica (Republican-FL, District 7)
Rep. Grace Napolitano (Democrat-CA, District 38)
Rep. Richard Neal (Democrat-MA, District 2)
Rep. Kristi Noem (Republican-SD, District 0)
Rep. John Olver (Democrat-MA, District 1)
Rep. Thomas Petri (Republican-WI, District 6)
Rep. David Price (Democrat-NC, District 4)
Rep. Ben Quayle (Republican-AZ, District 3)
Rep. Dennis Rehberg (Republican-MT, District 0)
Rep. Michael Rogers (Republican-AL, District 3)
Rep. Michael Rogers (Republican-MI, District 8 )
Rep. Harold Rogers (Republican-KY, District 5)
Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (Republican-FL, District 18)
Rep. Mike Ross (Democrat-AR, District 4)
Rep. Steven Rothman (Democrat-NJ, District 9)
Rep. Lucille Roybal-Allard (Democrat-CA, District 34)
Rep. Jon Runyan (Republican-NJ, District 3)
Rep. C.A. Ruppersberger (Democrat-MD, District 2)
Rep. Paul Ryan (Republican-WI, District 1)
Rep. David Schweikert (Republican-AZ, District 5)
Rep. Adam Smith (Democrat-WA, District 9)
Rep. Steve Southerland (Republican-FL, District 2)
Rep. Glenn Thompson (Republican-PA, District 5)
Rep. Bennie Thompson (Democrat-MS, District 2)
Rep. Mac Thornberry (Republican-TX, District 13)
Rep. Michael Turner (Republican-OH, District 3)
Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (Democrat-FL, District 20)
Rep. Edward Whitfield (Republican-KY, District 1)
Rep. Frank Wolf (Republican-VA, District 10)
(Source: FEC data on contributions to candidate campaign and leadership committees, accessed March 29 2011)
That’s a long list. In a time of war, Raytheon is an active patron.
SOURCE: That’s my Congress!