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America No. 1? (Reprinted from the Journal of March 4.)
America by the
numbers
March 3, 2005
by Michael Ventura
No
concept lies more firmly embedded in our national character than the
notion that the USA is "No. 1," "the greatest."
Our broadcast media are, in essence, continuous advertisements for
the brand name "America Is No. 1." Any office seeker
saying otherwise would be committing political suicide. In fact,
anyone saying otherwise will be labeled "un-American."
We're an "empire," ain't we? Sure we are. An empire
without a manufacturing base. An empire that must borrow $2 billion
a day from its competitors in order to function. Yet the delusion is
ineradicable. We're No. 1. Well...this is the country you really
live in:
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The United States is 49th in the world in literacy (the New
York Times, Dec. 12, 2004).
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The United States ranked 28th out of 40 countries in
mathematical literacy (NYT, Dec. 12, 2004).
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Twenty percent of Americans think the sun orbits the earth.
Seventeen percent believe the earth revolves around the sun once a
day (The Week, Jan. 7, 2005).
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"The International Adult Literacy Survey...found that
Americans with less than nine years of education 'score worse than
virtually all of the other countries'" (Jeremy Rifkin's
superbly documented book The European Dream: How Europe's Vision
of the Future Is Quietly Eclipsing the American Dream, p.78).
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Our workers are so ignorant and lack so many basic skills
that American businesses spend $30 billion a year on remedial
training (NYT, Dec. 12, 2004). No wonder they relocate elsewhere!
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"The European Union leads the U.S. in...the number of
science and engineering graduates; public research and development
(R&D) expenditures; and new capital raised" (The
European Dream, p.70).
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"Europe surpassed the United States in the mid-1990s as
the largest producer of scientific literature" (The European
Dream, p.70).
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Nevertheless, Congress cut funds to the National Science
Foundation. The agency will issue 1,000 fewer research grants this
year (NYT, Dec. 21, 2004).
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Foreign applications to U.S. grad schools declined 28
percent last year. Foreign student enrollment on all levels fell for
the first time in three decades, but increased greatly in Europe and
China. Last year Chinese grad-school graduates in the U.S. dropped
56 percent, Indians 51 percent, South Koreans 28 percent (NYT, Dec.
21, 2004). We're not the place to be anymore.
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The World Health Organization "ranked the countries of
the world in terms of overall health performance, and the U.S.
[was]...37th." In the fairness of health care, we're 54th.
"The irony is that the United States spends more per capita for
health care than any other nation in the world" (The
European Dream, pp.79-80). Pay more, get lots, lots less.
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"The U.S. and South Africa are the only two developed
countries in the world that do not provide health care for all their
citizens" (The European Dream, p.80). Excuse me, but
since when is South Africa a "developed" country? Anyway,
that's the company we're keeping.
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Lack of health insurance coverage causes 18,000 unnecessary
American deaths a year. (That's six times the number of people
killed on 9/11.) (NYT, Jan. 12, 2005.)
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"U.S. childhood poverty now ranks 22nd, or second to
last, among the developed nations. Only Mexico scores lower" (The
European Dream, p.81). Been to Mexico lately? Does it look
"developed" to you? Yet it's the only
"developed" country to score lower in childhood poverty.
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Twelve million American families--more than 10 percent of
all U.S. households--"continue to struggle, and not always
successfully, to feed themselves." Families that "had
members who actually went hungry at some point last year"
numbered 3.9 million (NYT, Nov. 22, 2004).
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The United States is 41st in the world in infant mortality.
Cuba scores higher (NYT, Jan. 12, 2005).
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Women are 70 percent more likely to die in childbirth in
America than in Europe (NYT, Jan. 12, 2005).
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The leading cause of death of pregnant women in this country
is murder (CNN, Dec. 14, 2004).
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"Of the 20 most developed countries in the world, the
U.S. was dead last in the growth rate of total compensation to its
workforce in the 1980s.... In the 1990s, the U.S. average
compensation growth rate grew only slightly, at an annual rate of
about 0.1 percent" (The European Dream, p.39). Yet
Americans work longer hours per year than any other industrialized
country, and get less vacation time.
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"Sixty-one of the 140 biggest companies on the Global
Fortune 500 rankings are European, while only 50 are U.S.
companies" (The European Dream, p.66). "In a recent
survey of the world's 50 best companies, conducted by Global
Finance, all but one were European" (The European Dream,
p.69).
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"Fourteen of the 20 largest commercial banks in the
world today are European.... In the chemical industry, the European
company BASF is the world's leader, and three of the top six players
are European. In engineering and construction, three of the top five
companies are European.... The two others are Japanese. Not a single
American engineering and construction company is included among the
world's top nine competitors. In food and consumer products, Nestlé
and Unilever, two European giants, rank first and second,
respectively, in the world. In the food and drugstore retail trade,
two European companies...are first and second, and European
companies make up five of the top ten. Only four U.S. companies are
on the list" (The European Dream, p.68).
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The United States has lost 1.3 million jobs to China in the
last decade (CNN, Jan. 12, 2005).
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U.S. employers eliminated 1 million jobs in 2004 (The
Week, Jan. 14, 2005).
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Three million six hundred thousand Americans ran out of
unemployment insurance last year; 1.8 million--one in
five--unemployed workers are jobless for more than six months (NYT,
Jan. 9, 2005).
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Japan, China, Taiwan, and South Korea hold 40 percent of our
government debt. (That's why we talk nice to them.) "By helping
keep mortgage rates from rising, China has come to play an enormous
and little-noticed role in sustaining the American housing
boom" (NYT, Dec. 4, 2004). Read that twice. We owe our housing
boom to China, because they want us to keep buying all that stuff
they manufacture.
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Sometime in the next 10 years Brazil will probably pass the
U.S. as the world's largest agricultural producer. Brazil is now the
world's largest exporter of chickens, orange juice, sugar, coffee,
and tobacco. Last year, Brazil passed the U.S. as the world's
largest beef producer. (Hear that, you poor deluded cowboys?) As a
result, while we bear record trade deficits, Brazil boasts a $30
billion trade surplus (NYT, Dec. 12, 2004).
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As of last June, the U.S. imported more food than it
exported (NYT, Dec. 12, 2004).
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Bush: 62,027,582 votes. Kerry: 59,026,003 votes. Number of
eligible voters who didn't show up: 79,279,000 (NYT, Dec. 26, 2004).
That's more than a third. Way more. If more than a third of Iraqis
don't show for their election, no country in the world will think
that election legitimate.
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One-third of all U.S. children are born out of wedlock.
One-half of all U.S. children will live in a one-parent house (CNN,
Dec. 10, 2004).
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"Americans are now spending more money on gambling than
on movies, videos, DVDs, music, and books combined" (The
European Dream, p.28).
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"Nearly one out of four Americans [believe] that using
violence to get what they want is acceptable" (The European
Dream, p.32).
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Forty-three percent of Americans think torture is sometimes
justified, according to a PEW Poll (Associated Press, Aug. 19,
2004).
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"Nearly 900,000 children were abused or neglected in
2002, the last year for which such data are available" (USA
Today, Dec. 21, 2004).
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"The International Association of Chiefs of Police said
that cuts by the [Bush] administration in federal aid to local
police agencies have left the nation more vulnerable than ever"
(USA Today, Nov. 17, 2004).
No.
1? In most important categories we're not even in the Top 10
anymore. Not even close.
The
USA is "No. 1" in nothing but weaponry, consumer spending,
debt, and delusion.
Reprinted
from the Austin Chronicle.
Twisting the Minds of the American People
http://www.counterpunch.com/cloughley03072005.html
March 7, 2005
by Brian Coughley
More
War Crimes
Let
me paint a word picture. An unarmed, wounded American soldier is
lying helpless, bleeding and barely conscious on the floor of a
church in a country with which the US is at war. An armed soldier of
that country walks up to the wounded American. It so happens that a
TV cameraman is present. He films the foreign soldier shouting,
"He's fucking faking he's dead!" One of his comrades says
"And he's breathing". The first soldier again yells
"He's faking he's fucking dead!" He then kills the
helpless, wounded man with a burst of fire that blows his head off
and spatters the room with blood and tiny bits of flesh and bone.
One of the foreign soldiers says "He's dead, now."
Question
One: What do you think the reaction of most of the American people
would be to the murder of a wounded, unarmed US soldier lying
helpless and barely conscious on the floor of a church in a foreign
land?
Question
Two: What was the reaction of most of the American people to the
murder of a wounded, unarmed Iraqi lying helpless and barely
conscious on the floor of a mosque in his own country?
First
Answer: Shrieking outrage and demands for the foreigner to be tried
and executed, whichever came first.
Second Answer: Unconcern.
The
dialogue about faking it came from a CBS tape of a US soldier
killing an Iraqi prisoner. The whole thing was recorded. It is
undeniable that the crime was committed. The clips of the murder
were played worldwide on television - except for the actual killing,
because that was thought too vile, even for a television audience
accustomed to the most explicitly horrible murder scenes. And nobody
has dared take a poll as to how many Americans approve of the
murder. Most TV reports called it "an incident", and it
has dropped out of sight because, to put it bluntly, an American
life is considered to be worth more than an Iraqi life. To many
millions of Americans, the marine who murdered the helpless man is a
hero. If you doubt this, please read on.
Think
about another 'incident', when a squad of US soldiers opened fire on
a car travelling along the Baghdad-Airport road on March 4, killing
an Italian official. The lies began at once, and there is no point
in describing what happened because the truth as told by
eyewitnesses has already been denied by the military, and the
official version will be accepted by much of the US media. It is not
surprising that the media will toe the official line, as most of
their readers and viewers automatically doubt what they are told by
foreign or independent US sources (not that there are many of the
latter, these days), and are uncomfortable with anything that smacks
of criticism of US soldiers. This is because such criticism is
considered unpatriotic and unforgivable, even if it is justified by
first-hand evidence of brutality or murder. And if audiences are
unhappy about what appears in the media, advertisers will be even
more unhappy and will withdraw their business. In short: mainstream
news cover in the US is directed by two major factors: advertising
revenue and its precursor, audience prejudice. And advertisers get
their financial messages from some very unpleasant bigots.
These
are people like the beauty who commented on the killing of the
Italian official and the wounding of the Italian journalist he was
escorting to freedom (that's Bush freedom: it comes with free
shrapnel wounds) as follows:
"Too
bad the US troops didn't shoot her in the head and been done with
trouble making people like her . . . Posted by bpb901 March 5."
We
only have to look at the deranged outpourings on right wing blogs to
realize there are millions of Americans who feel exactly the same
way as bpb901. He or she is not in any way unusual. Unhinged and
demented, yes ; badly in need of urgent mental treatment, certainly
; but out of the ordinary: no. (Bear in mind that The Economist of
March 5-11 noted the uncomfortable statistic that "about one in
five Americans now suffer from a diagnosable mental disorder".)
Think
back to the 'incident' in January at Tal Afar in which US soldiers
killed the mother and father of six kids. Getty Images photographer
Chris Hondros was there. He described the shambles like this:
"We
have a car coming," someone called out as we entered an
intersection. We could see the car about a 100 meters away. The car
continued coming; I couldn't see it anymore from my perch but could
hear its engine now, a high whine that sounded more like
acceleration than slowing down. It was maybe 50 yards away now.
"Stop that car!" someone shouted out, seemingly
simultaneously with someone firing what sounded like warning shots
-- a staccato, measured burst. The car continued coming. And then,
perhaps less than a second later, a cacophony of fire, shots
rattling off in a chaotic, overlapping din . . . . From the sidewalk
I could see into the bullet-mottled windshield more clearly. The
driver of the car, a man, was penetrated by so many bullets that his
skull had collapsed, leaving his body grotesquely disfigured. A
woman also lay dead in the front . . . the children continued to
wail and scream, huddled against a wall, sandwiched between soldiers
either binding their wounds or trying to comfort them . . . the
teenaged girl kept shouting, "Why did they shoot us? We have no
weapons! We were just going home!"
We
know about the killing of the father and mother of six kids because
a photographer was there and we've seen his evidence. Same for the
murder of the wounded prisoner. And we know about the killing of the
Italian official because there is a high-profile former hostage
still alive to tell us what really happened. But if these
'incidents' had not involved independent witnesses we would have
been told nothing about them. They would have gone unrecorded, as
have unknown numbers of similar atrocities in and around many
cities. The Washington Post of 7 March says US officials "have
declined to estimate how many civilians . . . have been killed
accidentally by US forces at checkpoints or elsewhere in Iraq"
This is no surprise, because although countless Iraqis have been
killed by being sprayed with bullets by delinquent troops, the
stories recounted by Iraqi witnesses of these terrible events are
ignored. There are many people with the mentality of the moron who
wrote "Too bad the US troops didn't shoot her in the head and
been done with trouble making people like her . . .", and none
of them would for an instant condemn the murder of a helpless
prisoner by a heroic marine. Neither would they be critical of the
gallant troops who wiped out the parents of six children. It is a
terrible thing to say, but it must be said: there are millions of
Americans who would and do applaud these murders. In the case of the
Italian murder, however, they seem to be a bit out of step with
their hero, the deranged Bush.
Bush
and Rumsfeld have grovelled to Italy's crooked prime minister,
Berlusconi, because their troops murdered an Italian citizen and
wounded another. There was a phone call of apology from Air Force
One to Rome the moment the news broke, and the Bush media machine
trotted out the usual garbage about the car being attacked "by
coalition forces". (This phrase is used by the Bush people to
try to avoid acknowledgement that US troops have been criminally
incompetent yet again.) Bush spoke to Berlusconi "to express
his regret about the incident that occurred earlier today," and
to assure "prime minister Berlusconi that the incident will be
fully investigated." But there is never an investigation of the
murder of Iraqis. To the US military and to millions of tragically
disturbed Americans they are non-persons.
Iraqi
lives do not matter. Just as in Hitler's Germany the Nazis referred
to various sections of the population (Jews, gypsies and other
'antisocial elements') as the "untermenschen" -- the
sub-humans -- so do US troops and the crazed bigots who bay for
blood refer to Iraqis as "ragheads" -- the sub-humans. The
Nazi regime was founded and fostered by people who thought along the
lines of "Too bad the US troops didn't shoot her in the head
and been done with trouble making people like her . . .". If
people are trouble-makers, well, don't try to live with them ; don't
try to understand them ; don't try to treat them as human beings:
just shoot them. Or torture them. Or both. What the hell? The
reasoning is that they are different to the superior people and
therefore they should not be allowed to exist.
The
attitude of millions of Americans is exactly that of the German
supporters of fascism in the 1930s and early 1940s. They were
encouraged to think of themselves as the Master Race and there were
whole nations whose populations could be treated as inferiors, and
they took pride in doing just that. The present wave of hysterical
intolerance in the US makes the McCarthy years of persecution look
benign, because the idea has been planted by Bush and his people
that US citizens are superior in every possible way. There can be no
admission of frailty, and no acceptance of equality. International
law and treaties are ignored or treated with contempt, and human
dignity has become irrelevant. Hysterical ultra-nationalism is
thriving and gathering pace.
The
director of the slippery slope to totalitarianism has beckoned his
citizens, and they are responding with enthusiasm to his
encouragement. War crimes are being committed by US troops and
spooks on an extraordinary scale all round the world, but the
biggest war crime is taking place in Washington: it is the twisting
of the minds of the American people.
Brian Cloughley writes on
military and political affairs. He can be reached through his
website www.briancloughley.com
Comment:
This is an excellent article and gives the lie that
many current American reporters are ignorant dunces. - ed
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