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The Last Defender of the American Republic?
LA Weekly ^ | July 5, 2002 | julMarc Cooper

Posted on 07/05/2002 11:10:04 AM PDT by bloggerjohn

An interview with Gore Vidal by Marc Cooper

HE MIGHT BE AMERICA'S LAST small-r republican. Gore Vidal, now 76, has made a lifetime out of critiquing America's imperial impulses and has -- through two dozen novels and hundreds of essays -- argued tempestuously that the U.S. should retreat back to its more Jeffersonian roots, that it should stop meddling in the affairs of other nations and the private affairs of its own citizens.

That's the thread that runs through Vidal's latest best-seller -- an oddly packaged collection of essays published in the wake of September 11 titled Perpetual War for Perpetual Peace: How We Got To Be So Hated. To answer the question in his subtitle, Vidal posits that we have no right to scratch our heads over what motivated the perpetrators of the two biggest terror attacks in our history, the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing and last September's twin-tower holocaust.

Vidal writes: "It is a law of physics (still on the books when last I looked) that in nature there is no action without reaction. The same appears to be true in human nature -- that is, history." The "action" Vidal refers to is the hubris of an American empire abroad (illustrated by a 20-page chart of 200 U.S. overseas military adventures since the end of World War II) and a budding police state at home. The inevitable "reaction," says Vidal, is nothing less than the bloody handiwork of Osama bin Laden and Timothy McVeigh. "Each was enraged," he says, "by our government's reckless assaults upon other societies" and was, therefore, "provoked" into answering with horrendous violence.

Some might take that to be a suggestion that America had it coming on September 11. So when I met up with Vidal in the Hollywood Hills home he maintains (while still residing most of his time in Italy), the first question I asked him was this:

L.A. WEEKLY: Are you arguing that the 3,000 civilians killed on September 11 somehow deserved their fate?

GORE VIDAL: I don't think we, the American people, deserved what happened. Nor do we deserve the sort of governments we have had over the last 40 years. Our governments have brought this upon us by their actions all over the world. I have a list in my new book that gives the reader some idea how busy we have been. Unfortunately, we only get disinformation from The New York Times and other official places. Americans have no idea of the extent of their government's mischief. The number of military strikes we have made unprovoked, against other countries, since 1947-48 is more than 250. These are major strikes everywhere from Panama to Iran. And it isn't even a complete list. It doesn't include places like Chile, as that was a CIA operation. I was only listing military attacks.

Americans are either not told about these things or are told we attacked them because . . . well . . . Noriega is the center of all world drug traffic and we have to get rid of him. So we kill some Panamanians in the process. Actually we killed quite a few. And we brought in our Air Force. Panama didn't have an air force. But it looked good to have our Air Force there, busy, blowing up buildings. Then we kidnap their leader, Noriega, a former CIA man who worked loyally for the United States. We arrest him. Try him in an American court that has no jurisdiction over him and lock him up -- nobody knows why. And that was supposed to end the drug trade because he had been demonized by The New York Times and the rest of the imperial press.

[The government] plays off [Americans'] relative innocence, or ignorance to be more precise. This is probably why geography has not really been taught since World War II -- to keep people in the dark as to where we are blowing things up. Because Enron wants to blow them up. Or Unocal, the great pipeline company, wants a war going some place.

And people in the countries who are recipients of our bombs get angry. The Afghans had nothing to do with what happened to our country on September 11. But Saudi Arabia did. It seems like Osama is involved, but we don't really know. I mean, when we went into Afghanistan to take over the place and blow it up, our commanding general was asked how long it was going to take to find Osama bin Laden. And the commanding general looked rather surprised and said, well, that's not why we are here.

Oh no? So what was all this about? It was about the Taliban being very, very bad people and that they treated women very badly, you see. They're not really into women's rights, and we here are very strong on women's rights; and we should be with Bush on that one because he's taking those burlap sacks off of women's heads. Well, that's not what it was about.

What it was really about -- and you won't get this anywhere at the moment -- is that this is an imperial grab for energy resources. Until now, the Persian Gulf has been our main source for imported oil. We went there, to Afghanistan, not to get Osama and wreak our vengeance. We went to Afghanistan partly because the Taliban -- whom we had installed at the time of the Russian occupation -- were getting too flaky and because Unocal, the California corporation, had made a deal with the Taliban for a pipeline to get the Caspian- area oil, which is the richest oil reserve on Earth. They wanted to get that oil by pipeline through Afghanistan to Pakistan to Karachi and from there to ship it off to China, which would be enormously profitable. Whichever big company could cash in would make a fortune. And you'll see that all these companies go back to Bush or Cheney or to Rumsfeld or someone else on the Gas and Oil Junta, which, along with the Pentagon, governs the United States.

We had planned to occupy Afghanistan in October, and Osama, or whoever it was who hit us in September, launched a pre-emptory strike. They knew we were coming. And this was a warning to throw us off guard.

With that background, it now becomes explicable why the first thing Bush did after we were hit was to get Senator Daschle and beg him not to hold an investigation of the sort any normal country would have done. When Pearl Harbor was struck, within 20 minutes the Senate and the House had a joint committee ready. Roosevelt beat them to it, because he knew why we had been hit, so he set up his own committee. But none of this was to come out, and it hasn't come out.

L.A. WEEKLY: Still, even if one reads the chart of military interventions in your book and concludes that, indeed, the U.S. government is a "source of evil" -- to lift a phrase -- can't you conceive that there might be other forces of evil as well? Can't you imagine forces of religious obscurantism, for example, that act independently of us and might do bad things to us, just because they are also evil?

GORE VIDAL: Oh yes. But you picked the wrong group. You picked one of the richest families in the world -- the bin Ladens. They are extremely close to the royal family of Saudi Arabia, which has conned us into acting as their bodyguard against their own people -- who are even more fundamentalist than they are. So we are dealing with a powerful entity if it is Osama.

What isn't true is that people like him just come out of the blue. You know, the average American thinks we just give away billions in foreign aid, when we are the lowest in foreign aid among developed countries. And most of what we give goes to Israel and a little bit to Egypt.

I was in Guatemala when the CIA was preparing its attack on the Arbenz government [in 1954]. Arbenz, who was a democratically elected president, mildly socialist. His state had no revenues; its biggest income maker was United Fruit Company. So Arbenz put the tiniest of taxes on bananas, and Henry Cabot Lodge got up in the Senate and said the Communists have taken over Guatemala and we must act. He got to Eisenhower, who sent in the CIA, and they overthrew the government. We installed a military dictator, and there's been nothing but bloodshed ever since.

Now, if I were a Guatemalan and I had the means to drop something on somebody in Washington, or anywhere Americans were, I would be tempted to do it. Especially if I had lost my entire family and seen my country blown to bits because United Fruit didn't want to pay taxes. Now, that's the way we operate. And that's why we got to be so hated.

L.A. WEEKLY: You've spent decades bemoaning the erosion of civil liberties and the conversion of the U.S. from a republic into what you call an empire. Have the aftereffects of September 11, things like the USA Patriot bill, merely pushed us further down the road or are they, in fact, some sort of historic turning point?

GORE VIDAL: The second law of thermodynamics always rules: Everything is always running down. And so is our Bill of Rights. The current junta in charge of our affairs, one not legally elected, but put in charge of us by the Supreme Court in the interests of the oil and gas and defense lobbies, have used first Oklahoma City and now September 11 to further erode things.

And when it comes to Oklahoma City and Tim McVeigh, well, he had his reasons as well to carry out his dirty deed. Millions of Americans agree with his general reasoning, though no one, I think, agrees with the value of blowing up children. But the American people, yes, they instinctively know when the government goes off the rails like it did at Waco and Ruby Ridge. No one has been elected president in the last 50 years unless he ran against the federal government. So, the government should get through its head that it is hated not only by foreigners whose countries we have wrecked, but also by Americans whose lives have been wrecked.

The whole Patriot movement in the U.S. was based on folks run off their family farms. Or had their parents or grandparents run off. We have millions of disaffected American citizens who do not like the way the place is run and see no place in it where they can prosper. They can be slaves. Or pick cotton. Or whatever the latest uncomfortable thing there is to do. But they are not going to have, as Richard Nixon said, "a piece of the action."

L.A. WEEKLY: And yet Americans seem quite susceptible to a sort of jingoistic "enemy-of-the-month club" coming out of Washington. You say millions of Americans hate the federal government. But something like 75 percent of Americans say they support George W. Bush, especially on the issue of the war.

GORE VIDAL: I hope you don't believe those figures. Don't you know how the polls are rigged? It's simple. After 9/11 the country was really shocked and terrified. [Bush] does a little war dance and talks about evil axis and all the countries he's going to go after. And how long it is all going to take, he says with a happy smile, because it means billions and trillions for the Pentagon and for his oil friends. And it means curtailing our liberties, so this is all very thrilling for him. He's right out there reacting, bombing Afghanistan. Well, he might as well have been bombing Denmark. Denmark had nothing to do with 9/11. And neither did Afghanistan, at least the Afghanis didn't.

So the question is still asked, are you standing tall with the president? Are you standing with him as he defends us?

Eventually, they will figure it out.

L.A. WEEKLY: They being who? The American people?

GORE VIDAL: Yeah, the American people. They are asked these quick questions. Do you approve of him? Oh yeah, yeah, yeah. Oh yeah, he blew up all those funny-sounding cities over there.

That doesn't mean they like him. Mark my words. He will leave office the most unpopular president in history. The junta has done too much wreckage.

They were suspiciously very ready with the Patriot Act as soon as we were hit. Ready to lift habeas corpus, due process, the attorney-client privilege. They were ready. Which means they have already got their police state. Just take a plane anywhere today and you are in the hands of an arbitrary police state.

Don't you want to have that kind of protection when you fly?

It's one thing to be careful, and we certainly want airplanes to be careful against terrorist attacks. But this is joy for them, for the federal government. Now they've got everybody, because everybody flies.

L.A. WEEKLY: Let's pick away at one of your favorite bones, the American media. Some say they have done a better-than-usual job since 9/11. But I suspect you're not buying that?

GORE VIDAL: No, I don't buy it. Part of the year I live in Italy. And I find out more about what's going on in the Middle East by reading the British, the French, even the Italian press. Everything here is slanted. I mean, to watch Bush doing his little war dance in Congress . . . about "evildoers" and this "axis of evil" -- Iran, Iraq and North Korea. I thought, he doesn't even know what the word axis means. Somebody just gave it to him. And the press didn't even call him on it. This is about as mindless a statement as you could make. Then he comes up with about a dozen other countries that might have "evil people" in them, who might commit "terrorist acts." What is a terrorist act? Whatever he thinks is a terrorist act. And we are going to go after them. Because we are good and they are evil. And we're "gonna git 'em."

Anybody who could get up and make that speech to the American people is not himself an idiot, but he's convinced we are idiots. And we are not idiots. We are cowed. Cowed by disinformation from the media, a skewed view of the world, and atrocious taxes that subsidize this permanent war machine. And we have no representation. Only the corporations are represented in Congress. That's why only 24 percent of the American people cast a vote for George W. Bush.

L.A. WEEKLY: I know you'd hate to take this to the ad hominem level, but indulge me for a moment. What about George W. Bush, the man?

GORE VIDAL: You mean George W. Bush, the cheerleader. That's the only thing he ever did of some note in his life. He had some involvement with a baseball team . . .

L.A. WEEKLY: He owned it . . .

GORE VIDAL: Yeah, he owned it, bought with other people's money. Oil people's money. So he's never really worked, and he shows very little capacity for learning. For them to put him up as president and for the Supreme Court to make sure that he won was as insulting as when his father, George Bush, appointed Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Court -- done just to taunt the liberals. And then, when he picked Quayle for his vice president, that showed such contempt for the American people. This was someone as clearly unqualified as Bush Sr. was to be president. Because Bush Sr., as Richard Nixon said to a friend of mine when Bush was elected [imitating Nixon], "He's a lightweight, a complete lightweight, there's nothing there. He's a sort of person you appoint to things."

So the contempt for the American people has been made more vivid by the two Bushes than all of the presidents before them. Although many of them had the same contempt. But they were more clever about concealing it.

L.A. WEEKLY: Should the U.S. just pack up its military from everywhere and go home?

GORE VIDAL: Yes. With no exceptions. We are not the world's policeman. And we cannot even police the United States, except to steal money from the people and generally wreak havoc. The police are perceived quite often, and correctly, in most parts of the country as the enemy. I think it is time we roll back the empire -- it is doing no one any good. It has cost us trillions of dollars, which makes me feel it's going to fold on its own because there isn't going to be enough money left to run it.

L.A. WEEKLY: You call yourself one of the last defenders of the American Republic against the American Empire. Do you have any allies left? I mean, we really don't have a credible opposition in this country, do we?

GORE VIDAL: I sometimes feel like I am the last defender of the republic. There are plenty of legal minds who defend the Bill of Rights, but they don't seem very vigorous. I mean, after 9/11 there was silence as one after another of these draconian, really totalitarian laws were put in place.

L.A. WEEKLY: So what's the way out of this? Back in the '80s you used to call for a new sort of populist constitutional convention. Do you still believe that's the fix?

GORE VIDAL: Well, it's the least bloody. Because there will be trouble, and big trouble. The loons got together to get a balanced-budget amendment, and they got a majority of states to agree to a constitutional convention. Senator Sam Ervin, now dead, researched what would happen in such a convention, and apparently everything would be up for grabs. Once we the people are assembled, as the Constitution requires, we can do anything, we can throw out the whole executive, the judiciary, the Congress. We can put in a Tibetan lama. Or turn the country into one big Scientological clearing center.

And the liberals, of course, are the slowest and the stupidest, because they do not understand their interests. The right wing are the bad guys, but they know what they want -- everybody else's money. And they know they don't like blacks and they don't like minorities. And they like to screw everyone along the way.

But once you know what you want, you are in a stronger position than those who can only say, "Oh no, you mustn't do that." That we must have free speech. Free speech for what? To agree with The New York Times?

The liberals always say, "Oh my, if there is a constitutional convention, they will take away the Bill of Rights." But they have already done it! It is gone. Hardly any of it is left. So if they, the famous "they," would prove to be a majority of the American people and did not want a Bill of Rights, then I say, let's just get it over with. Let's just throw it out the window. If you don't want it, you won't have it.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Foreign Affairs; Government
KEYWORDS: billofrights; constitution; empire; freedom; republic; smallgovernment; war
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Like Vidal, I'm a small-government Jeffersonian Republican. I don't agree with the current expansion of our government nor our many overseas adventures either.

And for G-d's sake, why are we contemplating invading Iraq when it was Saudi money, men and religion that bombed the WTC? Start there.

1 posted on 07/05/2002 11:10:05 AM PDT by bloggerjohn
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To: bloggerjohn
Now THAT'S hyperbole.
2 posted on 07/05/2002 11:19:38 AM PDT by ECM
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To: bloggerjohn
And for G-d's sake, why are we contemplating invading Iraq when it was Saudi money, men and religion that bombed the WTC?

Because Islam is a religion of peace. Even though 90%+ of Islamists approve of the September 11th atrocity against America. And even though Islam was founded by a demon-possessed, mass-murdering pedophile. And even though the goal of most Islamists is to kill anyone who is not.

But if that were not the case, we could start with the center of the universe, the Ka 'ba in the heart of downtown Medina.

3 posted on 07/05/2002 11:21:54 AM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum
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Comment #4 Removed by Moderator

To: bloggerjohn
Truly bizarre.

First he says that the Afghans had nothing to do with the attacks.

Then that the attacks were a warning to us not to invade Afghanistan.

Big companies had a deal with the Taliban, so they decided to invade their business partners. Wouldn't it have been a lot cheaper to just follow thru on the deal?

I especially liked the part about us installing the Taliban at the time of the Russian occupation. The Taliban didn't exist till years after the Russkies pulled out.
5 posted on 07/05/2002 11:25:51 AM PDT by Restorer
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To: E. Pluribus Unum
The Ka'aba is in Mecca, not Medina.
6 posted on 07/05/2002 11:26:37 AM PDT by Restorer
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To: bloggerjohn
Gore Vidal, "The Last Defender of the American Republic"?

lolololololololololololololololololololololololololololol

7 posted on 07/05/2002 11:27:47 AM PDT by Psycho_Bunny
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To: Psycho_Bunny
I though Gore Vidal was food for worms?
8 posted on 07/05/2002 11:30:57 AM PDT by ohioman
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To: bloggerjohn
"And for G-d's sake, why are we contemplating invading Iraq when it was Saudi money, men and religion that bombed the WTC? Start there."

OK. Why do the two have to be connected?

Interesting article on govt., domestically. Otherwise lety drivel looking ever more incompetent, missing facts, wrong in many places, e.g., "Caspian" "Oil" "aid". Despite 9/11, this article shows that Vidal is maintaining an anti-American narrative. The interviewer invites him with the question about "other evils" to acknowledge that other people have interests and motives that are not merely responsive to alleged American evils. He deflects in standard lefty ways, avoiding religion, avoiding motives, centering on "Osama" and not the beliefs of the organization. "Guatamala" didn't bomb us, but this is a standard liberal-left deflection - reciting lefty hangups in order to seem "intelligent" while avoiding analysis of teh present crisis.

In fact, I'm surprised Vidal is actively deflecting these issues - it's like active disinfo. He's agendized despite his protests otherwise. I guess the America as the center of all evil is too ingrained into the lefty identity to give up. European papers? He's just reading narrow lefty garbage that makes him feel good. Seems the invocation of the word "Unocal" is cathartic for them. One can learn more facts about Qaida in USA Today.

BTW, this interviewer got Robert Fisk to say in this small California newspaper that Arafat was a "very immoral man." Not something Fisk tells his audience in those esteemed Western European papers.

9 posted on 07/05/2002 11:41:04 AM PDT by Shermy
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Comment #10 Removed by Moderator

To: Restorer
thanks
11 posted on 07/05/2002 11:47:16 AM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum
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To: bloggerjohn
Jefferson was a "meddler" and promoted U.S. land grabs of North American Indians' territories. It was his bright idea to establish outposts and associated forts on the frontier, to loan goods to Indians, who, when the hunting season was not good, had to give up "title" to their lands which had been used as collateral for the loan of goods (which were usually tools and such requirements for the hunting season).

Earlier on, during George Washington's second term in office, Jefferson's followers were ardently in support of the French Revolution --- cheered the massacres of French culture --- participated in covert aid to the French Navy at sea, and generally violated the neutrality Proclamation prohibiting such acts.

12 posted on 07/05/2002 12:20:40 PM PDT by First_Salute
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To: uburoi2000
Bump!
13 posted on 07/05/2002 12:25:24 PM PDT by Shermy
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To: bloggerjohn
Hate America First, by Gore Vidal:
I was in Guatemala when the CIA was preparing its attack on the Arbenz government [in 1954]. Arbenz, who was a democratically elected president, mildly socialist. His state had no revenues; its biggest income maker was United Fruit Company. So Arbenz put the tiniest of taxes on bananas, and Henry Cabot Lodge got up in the Senate and said the Communists have taken over Guatemala and we must act. He got to Eisenhower, who sent in the CIA, and they overthrew the government. We installed a military dictator, and there's been nothing but bloodshed ever since.

This event was the watershed for nearly every subsequent protest by the leftist liberals in the Americas (including the U.S.) and was pointed to over and over as the great evil of American patriotism; it has been thrown around every program of socialist interest on college campuses ever since; it is popular among the left-winger-weenies as the calling card or ID card of the politically correct's assertion that the United States of America is the enemy to be hated.

I may strongly disagree with even more such "businesses practices" than has Mr. Vidal, but his ill will toward Americans trying to defend themselves against the ultra-coercions of the nationalizing socialism(s) which he and his followers have favored, has constantly overlooked that very horror, such as this, which we still struggle against --- what the leftists have manifested; see: The U.S. case against the court (ICC) is bogus on its face., Minneapolis Star-Tribune, July 2, 2002, by editorial staff (posted by wallcrawlr). My reply there:

Why is there no mention of the truly large atrocities committed by the extreme left-wing in the Minneapolis Star-Tribune?

Will Castro and the communists of Cuba be arrested?

Will the communists of Southeast Asia be arrested?

Will the communists of Asia be arrested?

Heart of darkness: Cambodia's Killing Fields

 August 8, 2001 [CNN online]

By CNN's Joe Havely

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia -- The fields of Choeung Ek on the outskirts of the Cambodian capital, Phnom Penh, carry a dark secret.

Across the baked earth scraps of cloth and human bone poke through the soil and are slowly bleached white by the harsh tropical sun.

In the center stands a glass-walled shrine containing more than 8,000 skulls -- the remains of just a few of those who died here.

These are the Killing Fields of Cambodia.

Here, just a few kilometers from the center of Phnom Penh, tens of thousands of people met their deaths -- entire families wiped out.

Many of those killed were intellectuals or trained professionals -- people considered counter-revolutionaries by the Khmer Rouge leadership bent on turning Cambodia into a [communist, socialist, leftist, fascist] peasant's paradise. (In " [ ] " --- mine, F_S)

Towards the end of its rule, as the regime became increasingly paranoid and turned on itself, many once senior Khmer Rouge cadres also met their end at Choeung Ek.

Men, women and children -- some just a few months old -- were killed here, often in the most violent and brutal ways.

With bullets in short supply, the condemned were forced to kneel before an open grave then stabbed through the head with a sharpened bamboo stake ...

Reign of terror


The fields of Choeung Ek contain more than 100 mass graves

In the corner of the field stands a tree ...

Against its trunk the heads of babies were smashed by young men brainwashed into believing their actions would free Cambodia from colonial imperialism ...

Reuters contributed to this report.


14 posted on 07/05/2002 12:34:31 PM PDT by First_Salute
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To: Psycho_Bunny; aculeus; Orual; general_re; BlueLancer
Gore Vidal, "The Last Defender of the American Republic"?

lolololololololololololololololololololololololololololol

Worth repeating.

15 posted on 07/05/2002 12:35:09 PM PDT by dighton
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To: joanie-f; snopercod; TPartyType; brityank; JeanS
Bump - R'14.
16 posted on 07/05/2002 12:40:23 PM PDT by First_Salute
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To: bloggerjohn
What tripe!
17 posted on 07/05/2002 1:53:39 PM PDT by afraidfortherepublic
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To: First_Salute
Thank you, as always, for your insight and eloquence here.

The hallmark of the true communist/socialist: the atrocities they perpetrate are invariably perpetrated in the name of purifying society.

The hallmark of the communist/socialist apologist (of the Vidal ilk): they justify the atrocities, while crucifying America for her much less egregious ‘faults’.

In order for said purification to occur, one set of men must determine the definition of pure, and impose its definition on others. And, invariably, the other (less deserving of a voice) set of men (women/children) generally wind up sacrificing their individual lives and liberties (and usually many of both) in order for the men bent on purification to achieve their self-made definition of a pure society. It all boils down to the imposition of one’s set of beliefs on others. And it is the others who do all the sacrificing, while the self-proclaimed leftist gods merely dictate the terms, and then summon their apologists to provide the justification. Is there anything more arrogant?

In the name of radical Maoism, and voicing the desire to turn Cambodia into an agrarian utopia, all Pol Pot ever claimed he was doing was creating a ‘pure’ communist society. His altruism simply appeared to be atrocious to those who didn’t comprehend his noble aims.

....who can ever fathom the evil that men do? We stand disbelieving before genocide, when women's throats are slit with sharp palm leaves, when children's heads are smashed against tree trunks, when men are slaughtered with the crack of a hoe. These things happened every day in Cambodia for 3 1/2 terrible years, and when the world learned of it, people could only respond with dumb horror....[Pol Pot] never admitting his appalling conduct, never regretting the countless executions, the million more dead of starvation and overwork, the living population maimed in body or mind, the entire country reduced to Stone Age survival....Terry McCarthy, in 'The Butcher of Cambodia'

Vidal, while not necessarily cut from the same cloth as the Pol Pots of this world, is cut from the socialist apologist cloth….and the former could not continue to propagate without the support of the latter. America is a breeding ground for socialist apologists…. those who choose to ignore the genuine man-on-man atrocities that occur in this world, and who, instead, choose to denigrate every potentially questionable action that America has ever taken (her treatment of the American Indian, her acceptance of the institution of slavery….) and paint it as evidence that America is, and always has been, the source of evil in the world.

It is interesting that perhaps the most imperialist, tyrannical, sovereignty-destroying actions ever perpetrated by America occurred during the reign of a socialist/socialist apologist President. And those useful idiots, like Vidal, who are ever ready to point the critical imperialist finger at America, somehow turned a blind eye.

There were those (in Haiti, Bosnia, Somalia…) who were deafened by the apologists’ uncharacteristic silence.

18 posted on 07/05/2002 2:15:13 PM PDT by joanie-f
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To: joanie-f
The "purification" which you ably identify, explains some of the phenomenon of New England's, but particularly the State of Massachusetts' peoples who are seemingly inexplicable, conservative in personal tastes but leftist-hell-bent ... they suffer the residue of puritanism, where purification runs amok and corrupt.
19 posted on 07/05/2002 2:25:24 PM PDT by First_Salute
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To: uburoi2000
Until you pointed out the part about Vidal being a fine stylist, I had been contemplating that he was Justin Raimondo in disguise, by virtue of social habits and ideology but no one would ever praise Raimondo's style.
20 posted on 07/05/2002 3:43:48 PM PDT by BlackElk
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