eith issued arguably his most powerful
Special Comment yet tonight. This time he takes on the GOP's
newest fearmongering ad which quotes Osama bin Laden and Ayman
al-Zawahiri superimposed over pictures of explosions with the
sound of a ticking bomb in the background. As if that wasn't
enough, it's topped off with the cryptic message echoing LBJ's
1960 "Daisy" ad that ran just once: These are the stakes. [1]
In my opinion, the most important point Keith
makes concerns the recent uproar over the video CNN showed this
week of a sniper attack on US troops in Iraq. House Armed
Services Chairman Duncan Hunter and Congressman Brian Bilbray
have come out strong against it calling it a "terrorist snuff
film" yet they seem to have no problem with a RNC ad which is
really nothing short of a terrorist propaganda film itself.
UPDATE: Transcripts below the fold…
And lastly, tonight, a Special Comment on the advertising of
terrorism.
The commercial, you have already seen, it is
a distillation of everything this administration and the party
in power have tried to do these last five years and six weeks.
It is from the Republican National Committee,
it shows images of Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri. It
offers quotes from them, all as a clock ticks ominously in the
background. It concludes with what Zawahiri may or may not have
said to a Pakistani journalist as long ago as 2001, his dubious
claim that he had purchased suitcase bombs. The quotation is
followed by sheer coincidence, no doubt, by an image of a
massive explosion. "These are the stakes" appears on the screen,
quoting exactly from Lyndon Johnson's infamous nuclear scare
commercial from 1964, "Vote November 7th".
There is a cheap Texas Chainsaw Massacre
quality to the whole thing. It also serves to immediately call
to mind the occasions when President Bush dismissed Osama bin
Laden as somebody he didn't think about, except, obviously, when
elections were near. Frankly, a lot of people seeing that
commercial for the first time have laughed out loud, but not
everyone. And therein lies the true threat to this country.
The dictionary definition of the word
‘terrorize' is simple and not open to misinterpretation: "To
fill or overpower with terror; terrify; coerce by intimidation
or fear." Note please that the words ‘violence' and ‘death' are
missing from that definition. For the key to terrorism is not
the act-but the fear of the act. That is why bin Laden and his
deputies and his imitators are forever putting together
videotape statements and releasing virtual infomercials with
dire threats and heart-stopping warnings.
But why is the Republican Party imitating
them? Bin Laden puts out what amounts to a commercial of fear;
the Republicans put out what is unmistakable as a commercial of
fear.
The Republicans are paying to have the
messages of bin Laden and the others broadcast into your home!
Only the Republicans have a bigger bankroll.
When last week, the CNN network ran video of
an insurgent in Iraq evidently stalking and killing an American
soldier, Chairman of the House Armed Services Committee Mr.
Hunter, Republican of California, branded that channel quote
"the publicist for an enemy propaganda film," and added that CNN
used it to sell commercials. Another California Republican,
Representative Brian Bilbray, called the video quote "nothing
short of a terrorist snuff film."
If so, Mr. Bilbray, then what in the hell is
your party's new advertisement? And Mr. Hunter? CNN using the
film to sell commercials? Commercials? You have adopted bin
Laden and Zawahiri as spokesmen for the Republican National
Committee.
‘To fill or overpower with terror; terrify.
To coerce by intimidation or fear'
By this definition, the people who put these
videos together: first, the terrorists and then, the
administration, whose shared goal is to scare you into panicking
instead of thinking, they are the ones terrorizing you.
By this definition, the leading terrorist
group in this world right now is al Qaeda, but the leading
terrorist group in this country right now is the Republican
Party.
Eleven presidents ago, the chief executive
reassured us that ‘we have nothing to fear, but fear itself.'
His distant successor has wasted his administration, insisting
there is nothing we can have but fear itself.
The Vice President, as recently as this
month, was caught campaigning again with the phrase "mass death
in the United States". Four years ago, it was the now Secretary
of State, Dr. Rice, rationalizing Iraq with quote, "we don't
want to be…the smoking gun to be the mushroom cloud." Days
later, Mr. Bush himself told an audience that quote "we cannot
wait the final proof, the smoking gun, that could come in the
form of a mushroom cloud."
And now we have this cheesy commercial,
complete with images of a faked mushroom cloud and implications
of mass death in America.
This administration has derived benefit and
power from terrorizing the very people it claims to be
protecting from terror. It may be the oldest trick in the
political book: scare people into believing they are in danger
and only you can save them. Lyndon Johnson used it to bury Barry
Goldwater. Joe McCarthy leaped from obscurity on its back. And
now the legacy has come to President George W. Bush.
Of course, the gruel of fear is getting
thinner and thinner, is it not, Mr. President? And thus, more
and more of it needs to be made out of less and less actual
terror. After last week's embarrassing internet hoax about dirty
bombs in footballs stadiums, the one your Department of Homeland
Security immediately disseminated to the public, a
self-described former CIA operative named Wayne Simmons cited
the fiasco as quote "The, and I mean, the perfect example of the
President's Military Commissions Act of 2006 and the NSA
Terrorist Eavesdropping Program-how vital they are."
Frank Gaffney, once a respected Assistant
Secretary of Defense and now the president of something called
The Center for Security Policy added "one of the things that I
hope Americans take away from this is not only that they're
gunning for us. Not just in a place like Iraq, but truly
worldwide."
Of course, the "they" to which Mr. Gaffney
referred, turned out to be a lone 20-year-old grocery bagger
from Wisconsin named Jake. A kid trying to one-up some loser in
an internet game of ‘chicken.' His threat referenced seven
football stadiums, at which dirty bombs were to be exploded
yesterday. It began with the one in New York City, even though
there isn't one in New York City and though the attacks were
supposed to be simultaneous, four of the games were scheduled to
start at 1:00 pm Eastern time and the others at 4:00 pm Eastern
time. Moreover, the kid said that he had posted the identical
message on forty websites since September. We caught him in
merely about six weeks, even though the only way he could be
less subtle, less stealthy and less of a threat was if he bought
an advertisement on the Superbowl telecast.
Mr. Bush, this is the what–100th plot your
people have revealed that turned out to be some nonsensical
misunderstanding or the fabrications of somebody hoping to talk
his way off a waterboard in Eastern Europe? If, Mr. President,
this is the kind of crack work your new ad implies that only
you, and not the Democrats, can do, you, sir, need to pull over
and ask for directions. The real question, of course, Mr. Bush,
is why did your Department of Homeland Security even release
that information in the first place? It was never a serious
threat. Even the first news accounts quoted a Homeland spokesman
as admitting strong skepticism. The kind of strong skepticism
which most government agencies address before telling the
public, not afterwards.
So that leaves two options, Mr. President:
the first option, you and your Department of Homeland Security
don't have the slightest idea what you're doing here. Thus,
contrary to your flip-flopping between saying, "we're safe" and
saying, "but we're not safe enough", and contrary to the Vice
President's swaggering pronouncements about the lack of another
attack since 9/11, the last five years HAS been just an
accident.
Or there's the second option: your political
operatives leaked this nonsense for the same reason your
political operatives put out that commercial. To scare the
gullible.
Obviously, the correct answer, Mr. Bush, is:
all of the above.
There are some of us who could forgive you,
for trying to run your candidates on the coattails of the Grim
Reaper, for reducing your party's existence to "Death and the
Tax Us." It's cynical and barbaric, but after all, it may be
merely the extension of the gutter politics to which you have
subscribed since you sidled over from baseball and the business
world of other people's money.
But to forgive you for terrorizing us, we
would have to believe that you somehow competent in keeping
others from terrorizing us. Yet last week, construction workers
repairing a subway line in New York City were cleaning out an
abandoned manhole on the edge of the WTC site, when they
stumbled on the horrific and impossible: human remains from
9/11. Bones and fragments, eighty of them. Some as much as a
foot long. The victims had been lying literally in the gutter
for five years and five weeks. The families and friends of each
of the 2,749 dead, who had been grimly told in May 2002, that
there were no more remains to be found, were struck anew as if
the terrorism of that day had just happened all over again.
And over this weekend, they have found still
more remains. And now this week will be spent looking in places
that should have already been looked at a thousand times, five
years ago.
For all the victims in New York, Mr. Bush,
the living and the dead, it is a touch of 9/11 all over again.
And the mayor of this city, who called off this search four and
a half years ago is a Republican. The governor, with whom he
conferred, is a Republican. The House of Representatives,
Republican. The Senate, Republican. The President, Republican.
And yet you can claim that you and you alone can protect us from
terrorism?
You can't even recover our dead from the
battlefield. The battlefield in an American city. When we've
given you five years and unlimited funds to do so.
While citing a Military Commissions Act so
monstrous that it has now been criticized by even the John Birch
Society, you told us, Mr. Bush, quote, "there is nothing we can
do to bring back the men and women lost on September 11th, 2001,
yet we'll always honor their memory and we will never forget the
way they were taken from us." Except of course, for the ones
that have been lying under a manhole cover for five years.
Setting aside the fact that your government
has done nothing else for those five years but pat itself on the
back about terror, while waging pointless war on the wrong enemy
in Iraq and waging war on the cherished freedoms in America,
just on this subject of counter-terrorism, sir, yours is the
least competent government in time of crisis in this country's
history.
These are the stakes indeed, Mr. President.
You do not know what you are doing. And the commercial, the one
about which Zawahiri might say, "hey, pretty good, we love your
choice of font style," all that further needs to be said about
that is to add three words to Shakespeare. Mr. President, you
and that advertisement of terror are full of sound and fury,
signifying–and competent at–nothing.
Footnote:
[1] To have Keith Olbermann
out there, being courageously outspoken like he is, really makes
a difference. I have only one comment to his excellent speech:
Olbermann is referring to this Republican Government as being
incompetent, which is not true. He further states that the Bush
administration does not know what it's doing, which is not true
either. This government may be the most efficient administration
so far in the history of the United States to ring in the New
World Order. What you and I (and Olbermann) may think are
extremely stupid acts by Bush and his neo-cons, are all by
design. They are actually achieving exactly what they intend to
- they are writing new policies and executive orders by the day
to decrease our freedoms, and they are succeeding. So there is
nothing incompetent or stupid in their actions, seen from a New
World Order perspective. Wes Penre,
www.illuminati-news.com
.