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America is the republic of fear and paranoia
The Abu Dhabi National ^ | December 14, 2014 | Tony Karon

Posted on 12/14/2014 6:27:15 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet

Last week’s furore over the US senate’s report into the CIA’s torture of detainees was a reminder that since 9/11, America’s decision-makers have been a little like Darren Wilson, the Missouri policeman who shot and killed the unarmed black teenager Michael Brown last August. By his own account, Mr Wilson had been mortally afraid.

Brown, he said, “looked like a demon”, and he feared the young man might punch him to death. In his own mind therefore, he had acted in self-defence when he shot Brown dead.

The 2001 terror attacks left US leaders making decisions in a climate of exaggerated mortal fear. The Bush administration’s “war on terror” saw Americans accept unprecedented mass surveillance, the detention and torture of foreign suspects at offshore locations, use of unmanned drones to execute suspects many thousands of miles away by remote control, and catastrophic invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq.

The political and media establishment largely abrogated their responsibility, creating a climate of fear so pervasive it has never really receded. The frenzy of fear resulted in the deaths of hundreds of thousands of innocent people in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Yemen. The United States invaded Iraq because it couldn’t be sure Saddam Hussein didn’t still have some of the old stocks of chemical weapons it had helped him acquire in the 1980s to use against Iranian troops.

The Bush administration – most Democrats and the media were complicit – set out to persuade Americans that Iraq, despite being hobbled by two decades of war and sanctions and scarcely a threat to its immediate neighbours, now somehow posed a mortal threat to the American mainland. This threat, it was suggested, could even materialise as a nuclear attack. Much of America’s liberal media establishment accepted the idea that the US should ignore international law and invade Iraq as an act of pre-emptive “self-defence”.

Typically, self-defence is the explanation used by white police officers in the frequent shootings of unarmed black men. More often than not, as with Mr Wilson, the threat they feared was imagined.

Fear continues to pervade the US. It is as evident in the sales figures of guns and ammunitions as in the official order that medical personnel returning from West Africa be quarantined.

ISIL and Ebola were cited most on the campaign trail in last month’s midterm elections. CNN even offered its own taxonomy of panic by branding Ebola the ISIL of biological agents.

When the torture report’s executive summary was released last week, the political and media discussion focused on whether the programme had been effective. The debate was not about the legality of waterboarding, anal rape and other grotesque tactics as part of the systematic White House-authorised torture of captives by the CIA.

The senate report questions whether it yielded any significant intelligence; its critics dispute this. But the implication seems to be that if torture worked, then there was nothing to discuss – despite the fact that torture is, in fact, prohibited under US law.

Indeed, despite that legal prohibition, a New York Times poll last week found that fully half of the American public believe that torture is an acceptable tactic against terrorism.

Even when America’s leaders do things that violate their own stated values and laws, there is a public presumption of unique virtue. President Obama suggests that the practices outlined in the report are “contrary to who we are”, implying that actions taken by US security personnel under government authorisation did not represent America. And yet he promised that nobody would be held to account even if laws had been broken.

“There’s something bizarre about responding to a 600-page document detailing systematic US government torture by declaring that the real America– the one with good values – does not torture,” wrote liberal columnist Peter Beinart, a one-time advocate of invading Iraq. “It’s exoneration masquerading as outrage. Imagine someone beating you up and then, when confronted with the evidence, declaring that ‘I’m not really like that’ … A country, like a person, is what it does.”

When questioned about the brutality of the torture techniques described in the senate report, former acting CIA director John McLaughlin answered: “There will be things in this report that will be disturbing graphically, but I suspect if you had a similarly graphic description of what happens when innocents are killed in a drone strike, you would be equally disturbed by what you read.”

Mr McLaughlin wasn’t implying that Americans should be scrutinising Mr Obama’s secretive drone programme; he was asking that the torture programme get the same don’t-ask-don’t-tell treatment on Capitol Hill and in the media. Clearly, he is telling liberal Americans that they “can’t handle the truth” of what is required to protect them from all they are supposed to fear.

He even acknowledges that mistakes will be made and innocents will be killed. Whether or not that comforts Americans, it is cold comfort to a world that must live with the consequences of an unrivalled military power projecting that power in a fog of panic.

*****

Tony Karon teaches in the graduate programme at the New School in New York


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; US: Missouri
KEYWORDS: 911; abudhabi; darrenwilson; demagogicparty; ferguson; interrogation; memebuilding; michaelbrown; missouri; partisanmediashill; partisanmediashills; tonykaron; torture
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The Author

1 posted on 12/14/2014 6:27:15 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

The USA has become unrecognizable.


2 posted on 12/14/2014 6:29:01 PM PST by Sasparilla
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

That looks like possession.


3 posted on 12/14/2014 6:30:16 PM PST by Olog-hai
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
...unarmed black teenager Michael Brown...

DRINK!

4 posted on 12/14/2014 6:30:21 PM PST by Billthedrill
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Creepy . . .


5 posted on 12/14/2014 6:31:13 PM PST by A_Former_Democrat (Garner, Martin & Brown . . . all hoisted by their own petards)
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Comment #6 Removed by Moderator

To: 2ndDivisionVet

The author looks like a James Bond movie villain.


7 posted on 12/14/2014 6:33:23 PM PST by NorthMountain
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To: Billthedrill


8 posted on 12/14/2014 6:33:33 PM PST by Brother Cracker (You are more likely to find krugerrands in a Cracker Jack box than 22 ammo at Wal-Mart)
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To: All

Killing my family will do that to me.


9 posted on 12/14/2014 6:34:26 PM PST by rockrr (Everything is different now...)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

it appears that tony also works for AL Jazeera...


10 posted on 12/14/2014 6:35:27 PM PST by MeshugeMikey ("Never, Never, Never, Give Up," Winston Churchill ><>)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
No need to fear anything according to the author.


11 posted on 12/14/2014 6:36:40 PM PST by Red in Blue PA (Compared to obama, Jimmy Carter looks like Winston Churchill.)
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To: Red in Blue PA

“No need to fear anything according to the author. “...

except for police officers trying to defend themselves/


12 posted on 12/14/2014 6:38:30 PM PST by MeshugeMikey ("Never, Never, Never, Give Up," Winston Churchill ><>)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

The creep looks like he might not be right in the head. Taking a “selfie” with his “smart” phone while speaking on a land line. He must think he’s somebody important.


13 posted on 12/14/2014 6:38:41 PM PST by FlingWingFlyer (The trouble with America is that it's full of Americans. - The commie DemocRATS.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

“...teaches in the graduate programme at the New School in New York..”

::::::::

Oh, what a suprise.


14 posted on 12/14/2014 6:39:28 PM PST by EagleUSA (Liberalism removes the significance of everything.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Looks like he's getting more instructions from Soros regarding his next lines of garbage to print.
15 posted on 12/14/2014 6:42:44 PM PST by RedMDer (I don't listen to Liars but when I do I know it's Barack Obama.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

It wasn’t that Iraq itself posed a threat. It was the possibility of Iraq giving WMDs to a group like al Quaeda who would then deliver them against us. That was not not an irrational fear. Not that the facts matter to the dufus who wrote this piece.


16 posted on 12/14/2014 6:55:22 PM PST by Yardstick
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

FWIW
A website I frequent says that people who frequently demonstrate CFC (Central Forehead Contraction - refers to the way his brows are drawn together) while smiling mildly or moderately tend to be sociopaths. The author of the website I’m referring to, bodylanguagesuccess.com, says that any of us may demonstrate the body language of the man shown in the photo you posted but people who frequently have this facial expression are sociopaths.
For reference: http://www.bodylanguagesuccess.com/2014/02/nonverbal-communication-analysis-no_23.html

http://www.bodylanguagesuccess.com/2013/08/nonverbal-communication-analysis-no_26.html

I like the analysis that website provides of political figures (e.g., Hilary’s habit of templing her fingers)


17 posted on 12/14/2014 7:15:49 PM PST by ransomnote
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

A never-ending supply of leftist dopes.


18 posted on 12/14/2014 7:40:40 PM PST by driftless2 (For long term happiness, learn how to play the accordion.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

mk


19 posted on 12/14/2014 7:44:33 PM PST by facedown (Armed in the Heartland)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Getting punched in the face by someone trying to disarm you creates a climate of fear.


20 posted on 12/14/2014 7:45:09 PM PST by Bogey78O (We had a good run. Coulda been great still.)
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