Posted on 10/18/2001 5:18:58 AM PDT by sendtoscott
Ive already been accused by some of my newspaper readers of being a coward and a traitor because I cant get too excited about the Endless War on Terrorism. So I might as well go for the gusto and say what I really think.
First, despite the truly grievous attacks on innocent people in New York, Washington, and Pennsylvania, I still fear my own government far more than I fear Osama bin Laden, his al-Qaida network, and whatever foreign governments may have aided and abetted his terrorist plots. In my mind, the FBI is far more frightening than anthrax, and John Ashcroft isnt much better than the Ebola virus.
Second, while Americas foreign policy i.e., starving Iraqi children for 11 years because Washington no longer supports the dictator it helped prop up doesnt condone terrorism, it explains why some people are supportive of it.
Third, Americans have more to fear from the ideas expressed in a recent neoconservative tirade in The Weekly Standard than they do from the frothing U.S. flag-burners in Pakistan. Last weeks cover story, written by Max Boot of the Wall Street Journal, was titled, The Case for American Empire, and is something well beyond satire. Read it yourself for final proof that the neocons are insane.
Fourth, if I have to hear one more commentator prattle about America being targeted by bin Laden because of our nations freedoms, I am going to run into the streets of Santa Ana (where I work) yelling nasty things about our government. Dont worry, no one will bother me given that English isnt widely spoken around these parts.
As part of my quiet protest against the jingoism and war-mongering, most of my columns since the Sept. 11 attacks are dedicated to this proposition: America aint nearly as free as everyone seems to think it is.
On Sunday, I wrote about how the local childrens services agency has taken a young girl out of the care of her loving grandmother and placed her with a foster parent who, according to court records, owed $31,000 in back child support to his own kids, had a restraining order placed on him so he couldnt see them, and was accused in a sworn statement of swimming nude with his foster children.
I was reminded that government bureaucrats can take anyones kids at any time for any reason, and they neednt even tell the parent where the kid has been placed for 72 hours. Proceedings take place in a special kangaroo court where what the bureaucrats say is taken for gospel, and what parents and responsible adults say often is ignored. After my column ran, Ive been inundated with calls from readers relaying similar tragic dealings with these agencies.
A couple of weeks ago, I wrote about eminent domain abuses. In California, most cities have what are called redevelopment agencies, whose officials can declare any residential or retail area as blighted, and then exert broad powers of eminent domain to take properties from owners and hand them over to big developers. The real goal isnt blight removal, but the creation of new shopping centers and hotel complexes that bring in more tax revenues than the current residents or business owners bring in.
Cities are supposed to pay fair-market value for the properties they take, but they try to outright steal them by making lowball offers, backed by intimidating tactics worthy of the mafia. I wrote about how the city of Garden Grove took a thriving multimillion-dollar car rental business run by Korean immigrants, and offered them the whopping sum of $16,000 for the enterprise. Small entrepreneurs are routinely forced out of business by the government, and deprived of their livelihoods making it difficult to find the resources needed to fight back in court. These arent anomalies, but everyday occurrences in California and other states.
In another column, I wrote about Catholic school boosters who raised funds and started building a privately funded school on one of the few sites zoned specifically for schools in San Juan Capistrano. Although the local public school district can legally build on most any piece of property zoned in most any way, the public school officials didnt like the idea of competition. So once they saw the private school effort, they decided to try to use eminent domain to take the site for their own school.
These are just a handful of stories from one small, albeit rather loony, corner of America over the last few weeks. After each article was published, I received calls from other people telling about even more egregious incidents of government abuse. These include developers who have the total value of their property stolen from them after officials discover some endangered bug on the land, property owners who are forced to make their homes conform to bogus historical standards, a city that is forcing some privately owned motels to shut down because they cater to poor long-term residents rather than tourists, and lots and lots of unfair takings examples. Sometimes people are protected in the courts, but only after years of fighting.
We live in a land where the government taxes more than half your income, where officials can take your children or your property on a whim and leave you little recourse, where government agencies have complete power over what you can do on your own private property and when you can do it. Yet were supposed to be so proud of our free country that we go around the world liberating other people with our Tomahawk missiles. God bless America, my eye. God save it, is more like it.
In the most 'primitive' sense, I don't doubt that gubmint-paid teachers 'work hard';i.e.,put in long hours of stressful effort.
I guess my point would be, that the bulk of these energies are are at best mis-directed, and at worst, directly harmful to the children.
It could well be argued that this is the effective policy of state-controlled education everywhere --to identify and destroy intelligence, wherever found.
Sarah McLaughlin: "Your Love is Better than Ice Cream."
What conclusions can we draw from these two premises?
To you, I'm an apologist for the government. That's absurb -I just appreciate what we have.
To me, you are a growling, angry person and you think you know more than everyone else on the site who doesn't stay angry at the government.
Guess what? I know all your "stuff" about Waco and Ruby Ridge. Spent ages studying it - Yep, all the cover-ups and all that other information that fuels your anger. I think YOU"RE the one that "doesn't get it". You don't get the fact that our country gets past their mistakes BETTER THAN OTHER COUNTRIES. I think you have not participated in "the dream", and that it leaves you moaning and groaning to everyone around you. Guess what? We're way ahead of you. We were where you are and now we're not. Move on. See Ya'.
There's another thing too - Waco was Clinton's screw-up - not Bush's. Are you going to waste your life being a "voice in the wilderness" in one of history's great countries like the USA? Doesn't that ever strike you a bit like Don Quixote? Nit-picking and sputtering along in life? Pick yourself up and stop living in the past.
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