The Grand Illusion
The truth is that the risk of an
American being killed by terrorism is close
to zero, having been calculated at
1:20,000,000
By John Chuckman
February 25, 2015 "ICH"
- In the years since 9/11, American police
alone have killed at least twice as many
Americans as died in that single large
event, the annual toll of police killings
being somewhere between 500 and 1,000, the
variation owing to many such events going
inaccurately reported by police.
Each year, somewhere
between 30 and 40 thousand Americans are
killed in automobiles, the level having
declined in recent years. Each year about
15,000 Americans are murdered, down from
about 25,000 not too many years ago. Each
year about 100,000 Americans are killed by
medical malpractice. About 40,000 Americans
commit suicide annually. These are just a
few causes of death in America, not the
largest ones but some of the more
interesting.
Let’s get a rough total
estimate of what has happened to Americans
from these causes in the time since 9/11.
Just using the low number in each case for
fourteen years, 7,000 Americans were killed
by their own police, 420,000 were killed by
something parked in their garage, 210,000
were murdered by fellow citizens, 1,400,000
were killed by friendly family doctors, and
there were 560,000 who just decided to pack
it in for one reason or another. The total
of these various causes of death rounds to
2, 600,000 deaths, nearly 867 times the
number of Americans killed in 9/11, 867
collapsed sets of twin towers, nearly 62
collapsed sets of towers per year.
So why are we spending
countless billions of dollars fighting
terror, an almost insignificant threat to
our well-being? We spend a total by various
estimates of between 1 and 5 trillion
dollars (yes, that’s trillion with a “t”),
although such totals can never accurately be
given owing to secrecy, false accounting,
and the immense waste that is an inherent
part of all military and intelligence
operations. Even in the crudest military
terms of “bang for the buck,” ignoring all
the death and destruction and ethical
issues, just as the military routinely does
in its grim work, the War on Terror has to
be the greatest misdirection of resources in
all of human history.
Or is it? Perhaps there
are other reasons for the War on Terror,
reasons never discussed in newspapers or on
news broadcasts, reasons which make the
expenditure of such colossal amounts against
such an insignificant risk acceptable to
those doing the spending? Unless American
leaders are all lunatics, I think there must
be.
Most people are aware that
the War on Drugs has been a stupendous flop,
with a great deal of resources having bought
nothing except a general diminishment of
personal freedoms, construction of new
prisons, and make-work employment for many
unnecessary police and prison guards. But
each year the War on Terror spends many,
many times the amount spent on the War on
Drugs, and what has it bought us? A far
greater debasement of freedoms, almost
wiping clean parts of the Bill of Rights,
raising to a high status in our society such
dark and anti-democratic forces as security
agents of every kind and the military,
increasing exponentially the secrecy of
government and thus giving voters no hope
for an informed ballot, making countless
future enemies in the world, and causing
Americans willy-nilly to support filthy acts
identical to the hateful work of military
juntas who made tens of thousands of
civilians disappear.
I think there are only a
couple of explanations for this waste of
resources which otherwise employed could
have made the world an immeasurably better
place. They are assisted greatly by what
I’ll call the “crime in the news” effect,
although I might just as well call it the
“advertising effect,” because advertising
works on people’s minds through its seeming
omnipresence and repetition planting
suggestions, suggestions not entirely
different to those planted by the
stage-performer hypnotist in the minds of
his volunteers from the audience.
It has been demonstrated
many times that daily reports of violent
crime, even when the crimes occur outside a
listening community, cause people to become
apprehensive about many ordinary activities
such as letting kids walk to school or go to
the park to play. And no advertising
campaign in history could begin to compare
to the complete audience saturation of
“terror this or that” in our newspapers,
magazines, and on-air. Surely, no
totalitarian government ever more completely
blanketed its people with fearful
suggestions than does America’s “free press”
today. You literally cannot hear a news
broadcast or read a newspaper with the word
terror missing, a fact which keeps most
people in an unquestioning frame of mind
about what properly should be regarded as
sinfully immense expenditures to no useful
purpose, at the same time conditioning them
to surrender precious freedoms. For most
people, the fact is that fear overcomes both
logic and courage.
Americans, along with
people in other lands heavily under American
influence, have voluntarily given up claims
to what we believed were well-established
rights. Yes, there is some controversy over
the high-tech equivalent of Big Brother’s
telescreens, over the construction of
immense new or expanded agencies such as the
TSA and NSA, and even some over a
seemingly-endless set or wars, but much less
than you might have expected. There has been
relatively little controversy over America’s
smashing its adherence to everything from
the Geneva Conventions to the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, and the
complete disregard for established basic
principles of common law in America’s
international behavior goes largely
unremarked, at least in America.
In a very real sense,
America’s establishment, its government
within the government consisting of leaders
in security and the military and of its
great corporations, has been given licence
to create a kind of Frankenstein monster
which now stands ready with terrible powers
to do its bidding. It certainly isn’t just
terrorists who need fear, it is every person
with the impulse in his or her breast for
justice, fairness, and human decency, and it
is every country which has an impulse for
independence from America’s imperious
declarations of how they should carry on
their affairs. I don’t like the expression
New World Order, but it does in fact
communicate something of what has been
pursued relentlessly by America’s
establishment since 9/11 with an unbounded
sense of its entitlement and privilege. The
awesome creature it has brought to life -
which already runs secret prisons, tortures,
conducts non-judicial killings, and supports
horrible governments in many places - is no
respecter of principles or human rights or
even basic decency. We all know from history
and common experience that over time any
well-funded, established, and privileged
institution grows, altering the terms of its
charter and spreading its influence always
farther, just as today American
intelligence, bound by charter not to spy on
Americans, spies on them all the time
through various technical arrangements
effectively going around its charter.
This monster serves
ambitions abroad – crush democracy anywhere
it proves inconvenient or a barrier to the
interests of America’s establishment, as in
Ukraine and in Egypt and as attempted in
Venezuela, but also crush old arrangements
which have produced advancing societies in
other lands, even though they are not yet
democratic, as in Syria, Iraq, or Libya.
In a relatively short time
the monster has made a chaotic wasteland of
such previously prosperous lands as Iraq and
Libya, and it is now hard at work doing the
same to the lovely, ancient land of Syria
where it is allied in its efforts with some
of the ugliest violent fanatics you could
hope to find anywhere. Its acts have
resulted in many hundreds of thousands of
deaths in these places, countless refugees
and injuries, the destruction of much
precious infrastructure, and left people to
wallow in chaos for years to come.
It created a coup, and
thereby a civil war, in Ukraine, reducing
that impoverished land still further, and it
allied itself for the effort with the kind
of stormfront militia trash that even the
pathetic FBI surely would infiltrate and
investigate were they active in the United
States. It did all this just to gain
temporary psychological advantages over
Russia, a country whose leadership today far
better represents principles of
international peace and good order – not
without some distant echo of irony for those
of us raised on a steady diet of Cold War
propaganda - than those in Washington who
never stop mouthing slogans about rights and
democracy which they routinely ignore. We
all have an immense investment in America’s
reckless game of “playing chicken” with
Russia, the only country on the planet
capable of obliterating most of Western
civilization. I’ve never liked frat-boy
pranks and humor, but in this case the
overgrown frat-boys at the CIA are guffawing
over stupidities which risk most of what we
hold precious.
But the monster serves
also to intimidate America’s own population.
Don’t hold big or noisy demonstrations
against injustice, don’t complain too much
about authorities and truly abusive police,
don’t communicate with others who may be
viewed as undesirables for whatever reasons
by the government, and don’t describe any
group which has been arbitrarily-declared
terrorist as being merely freedom fighters –
any of these acts or many others risks
arbitrary powers that never formally existed
before.
Homeland Security has
stocked huge amounts of crowd-control
equipment and weapons, and it was a military
general who quietly announced a few years
back that the Pentagon was prepared should
martial law became necessary in America.
America’s local police forces, long ago
having earned an international reputation
for violent, militaristic behavior, have
been given surplus military-grade
crowd-control equipment. The FBI seeks new
authorities and capabilities regularly, the
same FBI with such a sorry record, going
back to its origins, of abusing authority.
In my mind, and I think in
the minds of many, America’s posture towards
the world resembles a pug-ugly bully
confronting you on the street, someone who
just will not let you pass until you give
him what he demands. The bully is the
country’s immensely wealthy and influential
privileged establishment, having the
country’s general population now completely
in tow, fearful and intimidated, quite apart
from being in large part underemployed or
unemployed. The bully naturally pays no
attention to international organizations and
agreements, believing himself above the
rules and constraints to which others hold.
The organizations are either simply ignored
or, as in the case of the UN, coerced into
behaving along acceptable lines, America
having spent some years recently refusing to
pay its legally-required dues just to prove
a point as well as having been involved in
more than one cabal to unseat a disliked
Secretary General.
And I fear this gives us
just a hint of what is likely to come
because, as we should never stop reminding
ourselves, “Power corrupts and absolute
power corrupts absolutely.”
The world’s hope for
relief from a form of international tyranny
comes from the growth of countries like
Russia, China, India, and Brazil. I wish I
could add the EU to the list, but it seems
almost as supine and voiceless as America’s
own general population or Canada’s present
government. Only forces capable of saying
“no” to America’s establishment and building
interest blocs to oppose its excesses offer
redress and relief in future, and it is only
through political contention that new
international organizations are likely to
emerge, ones with some power and effect.
Americans all give lip service to
competition in economics, but the concept
applies no less to the spheres of politics
and world affairs. And Americans all give
lip service to democracy, not realizing that
its governing elites represent the tiniest
fraction of the world’s population and
resemble in their acts abroad about as
aristocratic a government as ever existed.
John Chuckman is former
chief economist for a large Canadian oil
company. He has many interests and is a
lifelong student of history. He writes with
a passionate desire for honesty, the rule of
reason, and concern for human decency.
http://chuckman.blog.ca/