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 The Emperor Has No Clothes:
 No Connection 
	Between America's Wars and its Security
 
 By Paul Balles
 
 Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, August 27, 2012  
 How would you like to live under someone's boot?
 
 That's not a reference to a brute for a husband or a bitch for a bride. It's 
	a question motivated by the behaviour of the mindless louts who enjoy 
	holding sacrificial lambs as hostages and killing those who complain.
 
 Who would be so inhuman?  Many. Too many! Scan the histories of imperial 
	criminals and their thieving empires:
 
 European colonies, American 
	settlers, Russian Gulags, African slaves, Japanese internment camps, Jewish 
	holocaust, Palestinians, Darfur refugees, Guantanamo prisoners, South 
	African and Israeli apartheid, Armenian genocide, the prison camps of 
	endless wars.
 
 Where people are privileged enough to have basic 
	comfort, the emperors keep the privileged entertained with sports, 
	television, films, concerts, bars and pubs.
 
 According to journalist 
	Chris Hedges “There are hundreds of millions of people who have a tragic 
	intimacy with the twisted and brutal soul of American imperialism:
 
 “Okinawans, 
	Guatemalans, Cubans, Congolese, Brazilians, Argentines, Indonesians, 
	Iranians, Palestinians, Panamanians, Vietnamese, Cambodians, Filipinos, 
	South Koreans, Taiwanese, Nicaraguans, Salvadorans, Afghans, Iraqis, 
	Yemenis, Somalis.
 
 “There are now some 60,000 Special Operations 
	Command (USSOCOM) operatives, whom the president can dispatch to kill 
	without seeking congressional approval or informing the public.”
 
 No 
	one, apart from the rulers, can really know how many military bases the US 
	has around the world. The estimates range from 700 to more than 1,000 in 
	about 130 countries.
 
 The Department of Defence has been called a 
	charade--like the emperor who has no clothes--as there's nothing to defend 
	against and no threat of invasion.
 
 There's always a slogan, however, 
	to keep the population under control. For instance, "The earth should be 
	peopled, governed, and developed, as far as possible, by the races which can 
	do this work best, i.e. by the races of highest 'social efficiency'.”
 
 Other justifications include "the concept of terra nullius (Latin expression 
	which stems from Roman law meaning ‘empty land’) used by both the British 
	and Israeli Zionists.
 
 The favourite American justifying slogans have 
	included "making the world safe for democracy." During the cold war it was 
	"to make the US unsafe for communism,"
 
 After 9/11, the clarion call 
	has been to win "the war on terrorism." A few with less than emperor's 
	circle status have spoken out against the US imperial courts.
 
 The 
	latest have included author John Mortimer's "A 'war against terrorism' is an 
	impracticable conception if it means fighting terrorism with terrorism."
 
 And Noam Chomsky's appropriate and timely "Wanton killing of innocent 
	civilians is terrorism, not a war against terrorism."
 
 Meanwhile, the 
	US is going broke, and there's nothing the Imperial heads can do about it.
 
 The empire cannot afford to cut back on its major source of 
	homeland revenue--one that cannot be outsourced.  If America cuts back 
	on military expenses, the military-industrial complex will go out of 
	business and bankrupt the country.
 
 There's no connection between the 
	wars waged by the US and the security of America.
 
 The exception: the 
	danger to servicemen in places where they have no business being. Last week, 
	six U.S. troops were killed in a single attack led by Afghan forces. Two 
	more Special Operations troops were murdered after giving a newly graduated 
	Afghan trainee his weapon.
 
 "The Emperor's New Clothes" is a 
	short tale by Hans Christian Andersen about two weavers who promise an 
	Emperor a new suit of clothes that is invisible to those unfit for their 
	positions, stupid, or incompetent.
 
 When the Emperor parades before 
	his subjects in his new clothes, a child cries out, "But he isn't wearing 
	anything at all!"
 
 Choose your weaver wisely, Mr. President.
 
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