Fool’s Paradise

About a year ago, I had lunch with someone who then held a relatively high position in America’s homeland security forces. During our conversation, I casually referred to “somebody setting off a suitcase nuke in an American city.” He replied, “That will happen.” I therefore found striking the headline in this Sunday’s Washington Post: “U.S. … Continue reading “Fool’s Paradise”

Bye-Bye, Bush Doctrine

“The United States of America will not permit the world’s most dangerous regimes to threaten us with the world’s most dangerous weapons.” This excerpt from his “Axis-of-Evil” State of the Union of 2002 is the heart of the Bush Doctrine. Under it, we invaded Iraq. To our eternal embarrassment, we found Iraq had none of … Continue reading “Bye-Bye, Bush Doctrine”

Beat the Peaceful, Embrace the Violent

The day before yesterday, two demonstrations were held, just a few dozen kilometers apart. One took place at the Homesh settlement, not far from Jenin. Tens of thousands of settlers and their sympathizers came to demonstrate against the planned evacuation of this settlement. The demonstrators swore to sabotage the decisions of the government and the … Continue reading “Beat the Peaceful, Embrace the Violent”

The War Party’s
War on the Media

The U.S. government doesn’t like what the media is reporting in Iraq, but don’t worry, they have a solution: shoot them, then arrest them. At the beginning of last month, a cameraman with CBS press credentials was shot and arrested on suspicion of “insurgent activity.” As usual, the military’s story went through a few different … Continue reading “The War Party’s
War on the Media”

Nuclear Weapons Talks Open Amid Crisis

UNITED NATIONS – When world powers adopted a treaty to stop the spread of nuclear weapons some 35 years ago, many hoped it would pave the way for total disarmament. Instead, nations, including some that created the 1970 Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT), have stockpiled thousands of nuclear weapons and even now are making new ones. … Continue reading “Nuclear Weapons Talks Open Amid Crisis”

How Communists Became Republicans

Who and what is a neoconservative? Where do they come from? What do they have to do with Leon Trotsky, with Leo Strauss? How and why did they lie us into war with Iraq? These were my questions for Justin Raimondo on my radio show April 30, 2005, and this is what he said: Streaming … Continue reading “How Communists Became Republicans”

PATRIOT Act Should Ride Into the Sunset

When Congress passed the PATRIOT Act in the emotional aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, a sunset provision was inserted in the bill that causes certain sections to expire at the end of 2005. But this begs the question: If these provisions are critical tools in the fight against terrorism, why revoke them after five … Continue reading “PATRIOT Act Should Ride Into the Sunset”

Out of the Superpower Orbit

Of the two superpowers that faced each other down in an almost half-century-long Cold War, one – the United States – emerged victorious, alone in the world, economically powerful, militarily dominant; the other, never the stronger of the two, limped off, its empire shattered and scattered, its people impoverished and desperate, its military a shell … Continue reading “Out of the Superpower Orbit”

Backtalk, May 3, 2005

9-11 Conspiracy Fact & FictionThe appearance on the very same day of Justin Raimondo’s “Waco as Metaphor” and someone else’s “911 Conspiracy: Fact & Fiction” has me puzzled. The two messages seem to clash.By linking the official lies about Waco and Iraq, Raimondo cautions us against trusting Big Brother. By publishing The New American item … Continue reading “Backtalk, May 3, 2005”