October 01, 2019 "Information
Clearing House"
- Notice something important about the hoopla
regarding President’s Trump withholding of U.S.
foreign aid to Ukraine while he was requesting
Ukrainian officials to investigate Joe Biden and his
son Hunter Biden for possible corruption: Nobody in
Washington, D.C., or within the establishment press
is questioning the concept of foreign aid itself.
Foreign aid has become such an established and
accepted way of inducing foreign regimes to comply
with the dictates of U.S. officials that the thought
of ending it entirely doesn’t even enter the minds
of Republicans, Democrats, or member of the
mainstream media.
But questioning foreign aid
itself is precisely what the American people should
be doing. Not only does foreign aid contribute to
the out-of-control federal spending and debt that is
hanging over the American people (with the debt now
at $22.6 trillion and climbing), it also constitutes
one of the most evil and immoral practices of the
U.S. government.
Case in point: Egypt. Notwithstanding the fact
that the country is governed by one of the most
brutal military dictatorships in the world, the U.S.
government delivers $1.3 billion in military aid to
Egypt’s military dictatorship every year.
Like the United States, Egypt’s government is
based on the concept of a national-security state,
which is a type of governmental system in which a
vast and permanent military-intelligence
establishment plays a major role in society. In
Egypt, that role is much more pronounced and
predominant than it is here in the United States.
Here in the United States, the power and influence
that the Pentagon, CIA, and NSA wield are indirect
and often hidden. In Egypt the military-intelligence
establishment wields direct control of the
government and the economy.
To get a sense of how Egypt’s national-security
state operates, think back to the national-security
state system of Gen. Augusto Pinochet, who U.S.
national-security state officials helped install
into power in 1973. Pinochet was an unelected
military dictator who ruled Chile with an iron fist.
His forces rounded up tens of thousands of people
who were considered to be threats to “national
security” and tortured, raped, or killed them.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
Egypt’s military dictator, Abdel
Fattah el-Sisi, who, like Pinochet, took
power in a coup, holds a presidential
election, but everyone knows that it is
a sham. For all practical purposes, el-Sisi
stands in the same position as Pinochet
— as an unelected dictator.
Moreover, el-Sisi is every bit as brutal as
Pinochet was. For example, in the past couple of
weeks demonstrations have broken out in Egypt
against the corruption within el-Sisi’s dictatorial
regime. El-Sisi’s forces have immediately gone into
action to ensure that things do not get out of hand.
So far, they have arrested some 2,000 protestors.
According to an article in Aljazeera,
In Cairo, security forces closed off
entrances to Tahrir Square, the hub of the 2011
uprising that toppled former leader Hosni
Mubarak. There was a heavy police presence
around the square and at some junctions in the
city centre…. At Cairo’s Al-Fateh mosque, a
starting point for protests in 2011, dozens of
police, some in uniform and others in plain
clothes with masks and large guns, stood near
the exit as prayers finished. At least 20
security vehicles were stationed around the
mosque or patrolling nearby. Security forces
also stepped up their presence in main squares
in major cities and plainclothes police have
been checking motorists’ and pedestrians’ mobile
phones for political content…. In a brief
statement on Thursday, Egypt’s Ministry of
Interior warned it would “confront any attempt
to destabilise social peace in a firm and
decisive way.”
Moreover, Egypt’s criminal-justice system mirrors
that of the Pentagon and the CIA in Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba — indefinite detention, torture, denial of due
process of law, denial of effective assistance of
counsel, and denial of trial by jury.
There is also the economic aspect of Egypt’s
national-security state. The economic system is
based on the concept of socialist central planning,
with the military-intelligence establishment doing
the planning. Not surprisingly, this socialist
system has brought economic impoverishment to
Egyptian citizens, while enriching the regime’s
military-intelligence personnel. Dismal economic
conditions and corruption within the regime are
partly what is motivating the protesters.
Guess who is enabling this tyranny and socialism.
Yes, the U.S. government, with its $1.3 billion in
annual delivery of military armaments, which, like
all U.S. foreign aid, is nothing more than a bribe
to ensure that el-Sisi remains loyal to the U.S.
government. At the risk of belaboring the obvious,
those military armaments provide Egypt’s tyrants
with the ability to suppress or deter dissent within
the country. They also provide a means by which the
military-intelligence establishment is able to use
domestic tax revenues to feather their own nests.
The U.S. government’s partnership with and
support of Egypt’s regime should not surprise us.
Since the U.S. government was converted from a
limited-government republic to a national-security
state after World War II, U.S. officials have
demonstrated an affinity for foreign
national-security states. That’s why they installed
Pinochet, a military general, into power. Twenty
years before their Chilean regime-change operation,
U.S. national-security state officials destroyed
democratic systems in Iran and Guatemala and
replaced them with national-security states and
tyrants. Before the Persian Gulf War, the U.S.
government partnered and allied with Saddam Hussein
and his national-security state in Iraq. In the 2003
Iraq war, the U.S. government made certain that Iraq
continued with a national-security state type of
governmental system, albeit one with an elected pro-U.S.
dictator. It did the same in Afghanistan after it
invaded that country.
Just a few days ago, President Trump expressed
the sentiment of America’s national-security state
when he called el-Sisi a “great leader.” Trump, of
course, has also expressed a love for the brutal,
unelected communist dictator of North Korea’s
national-security state.
Americans who are looking to Washington, D.C., to
put America on the right track are looking in the
wrong direction. The American people need to look
inward, into themselves, into their consciences.
That is the only way for people to recognize the
moral and economic debauchery of foreign aid and,
for that matter, the entire national-security state
form of governmental structure. Once a critical mass
of Americans comes to that realization, we will be
on our way toward restoring sound moral, political,
and economic principles to our land.
Jacob G. Hornberger is founder and president of
The Future of Freedom Foundation. He was born and
raised in Laredo, Texas, and received his B.A. in
economics from Virginia Military Institute and his
law degree from the University of Texas. He was a
trial attorney for twelve years in Texas. He also
was an adjunct professor at the University of
Dallas, where he taught law and economics.
https://www.fff.org
We ask that you assist us in
dissemination of the article published by
ICH to your social media accounts and post
links to the article from other websites.
Thank you for your support.
Peace and joy
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.
In accordance
with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material
is distributed without profit to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving the
included information for research and educational
purposes. Information Clearing House has no
affiliation whatsoever with the originator of
this article nor is Information ClearingHouse
endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)