How
the Press & the CIA
Killed Gary Webb's Career
Today's
Stories
January 21,
2005
Derek Seidman
An
Interview with Army Medic and Anti-War Activist Patrick Resta
January 20,
2005
Paul Craig
Roberts
Dying
for Sycophants
William Cook
The
Bush Inauguration: A Mock Epic Fertility Rite
Joshua Frank
The Democrats and Iran: Look Who's Backing Bush's Next
Eric Ruder
Why Andres Raya Snapped: Another Casualty of Bush's War
Mike Whitney
Coronation in a Garrison State
Robert Jensen
A Citizens Oath of Office
Peter Rost
Bush Report on Drug Imports: Good Data, Bad Conclusions
David Underhill
Is It Torture Yet?: the Eclectic Fool Aid Torture Test
James Reiss
Adieu, Colin Powell: Pea Soup in Foggy Bottom
CounterPunch
Staff
Voices
from Abu Ghraib: the Injured Party

January 19,
2005
Marta Russell
Social
Security Privatization & Disability: 8 Million at Risk
Mike Ferner
Marines
Stretching Movement: Protesting Urban Warfare in Toledo
Nancy Oden
The
Nuremberg Principles, Iraq and Torture
Tony Paterson
A Catalogue of British Abuses in Iraq
Dave Lindorff
Bush's Divide-and-Conquer Plan to Destroy Social Security
Doug Giebel
BS and CBS: When 60 Minutes Helped Promote WMD Fantasies
Alexander Cockburn
Will
Bush Quit Iraq?

January 18,
2005
Paul Craig
Roberts
How
Americans Were Seduced by War: Empire and Militant Christianity
Jennifer Van
Bergen
Federal
Judge: Abu Ghraib Abuses Result of Decision to Ignore Geneva
Conventions
Douglas Lummis
It's a No Brainer; Send Graner: a Rap for Our Time
Ron Jacobs
Syria Back in the Crosshairs?
Seth DeLong
Enter the Dragon: Will Washington Tolerate a Venezuelan-Chinese
Oil Pact?
Lance Selfa
Stolen Election?: Most Democrats Didn't Even Bother to Inquire
Paul D. Johnson
Mystery Meat: a Right-to-Know About Food Origins
Elisa Salasin
An Open Letter to Jenna Bush, Future Teacher
January 17,
2005
Heather Gray
Misconceptions
About King's Methods for Social Change
Robert Fisk
Hotel Room Journalism: the US Press in Iraq
Dave Lindorff
What the NYT Death Chart Omitted: Civilians Slaughtered by US
Military
Jason Leopold
Sam Bodman's Smokestacks: Bush's Choice for Energy Czar is One
of Texas's Worst Polluters
Gary Leupp
A Message from the Iraqi Resistance
Douglas Valentine
An Act of State? the Execution of Martin Luther King
Harvey Arden
Welcome to Leavenworth: My First Encounter with Leonard Peltier
Greg Moses
King
and the Christian Left: Where Lip Service is Not an Option
January 15
/ 16, 2005
James Petras
The
Kidnapping of a Revolutionary
Robert Fisk
Flying Carpet Airlines: My Return to Baghdad
Ron Jacobs
Unfit for Military Service
Brian Cloughley
Smack Daddies of the Hindu Kush: Afghanistan's Drug Bonanza
Fred Gardner
The Allowable-Quantity Expert
Dr. Susan Block
The Counter-Inaugural Ball: Eros Day, 2005
John Ross
Zapatista Literary Llife
Suzan Mazur
Unspooking Frank Carlucci
M. Shahid Alam
America's New Civilizing Mission
Frederick B. Hudson
Jack Johnson's Real Opponent: "That I Was a Man"
Mike Whitney
Bush's Grand Plan: Incite Civil War in Iraq
Tom Crumpacker
A Constitutional Right to Travel to Cuba
Bob Burton
The Other Armstrong Williams Scandal
John Callender
La Conchita and the Indomitable 82-Year Old
Lila Rajiva
Christian Zionism
Saul Landau
An Imperial Portrait: a Visit to Hearst's Castle
Doug Soderstrom
A Touch of Evil: the Morality of Neoconservatism
Poets' Basement
Davies, Louise, Landau, Albert, Collins and Laymon
January 14,
2005
Robert Fisk
"The
Tent of Occupation"
Lee Sustar
Bush's Social Security Con Job
José
M. Tirado
The Christians I Know
Dave Zirin
The Legacy of Jack Johnson
Sheldon Rampton
Calling John Rendon: a True Tale of "Military Intelligence"
Tracy McLellan
Under the Influence
Yves Engler
The Dictatorship of Debt: the World Bank and Haiti
Tom Barry
Robert
Zoellick: a Bush Family Man
Website of
the Day
Ryan for the Nobel Prize?

January 13,
2005
Mark Chmiel
/ Andrew Wimmer
Hearts
and Minds, Revisited
Joe DeRaymond
The Salvador Option: Terror,
Elections and Democracy
Greg Moses
Every Hero a Killer?...Not
Dave Lindorff
The Great WMD Fraud: Time for an Accounting
Jorge Mariscal
Dr. Galarza v. Alberto Gonzales: Which Way for Latinos?
Christopher Brauchli
Gonzales and the Death Penalty: the Executioner Never Sleeps
Gary Leupp
"Fighting
for the Work of the Lord": Christian Fascism in America
January 12,
2005
Robert Fisk
Fear
Stalks Baghdad
Josh Frank
The
Farce of the DNC Contest
Jack Random
Casualties
of War: the Untold Stories
John Roosa
Aceh's Dual Disasters: the Tsunami and Military Rule
Carol Norris
In the Wake of the Tsunami
Mike Whitney
Pink Slips at CBS
Alan Farago
Can
the Everglades be Saved?
Paul Craig
Roberts
What's
Our Biggest Problem in Iraq...the Insurgency or Bush?
January 11,
2005
Tom Barry
The
US isn't "Stingy"; It's Strategic: Aid as a Weapon
of Foreign Policy
James Hodge
and Linda Cooper
Voice
of the Voiceless: Father Roy Bourgeois and the School of the
the Americas
Linda S. Heard
Farah Radio Break Down: Joseph Farah's Messages of Hate and Homophobia
Derrick O'Keefe
Electoral Gigolo?: Richard Gere and the Occupied Vote
Gila Svirsky
A Tale of Two Elections
Harry Browne
Irish
"Peace Process", RIP
January 10,
2005
Ramzy Baroud
Faith-Based
Disasters: Tsunami Aid and War Costs
Talli Nauman
Killing
Journalists: Mexico's War on a Free Press
Uri Avnery
Sharon's Monologue
Dave Lindorff
Tucker
Carlson's Idiot Wind
Dave Zirin
Randy
Moss's Moondance
Dave Silver
Left Illusions About the Democratic Party
Charles Demers
Plan Salvador for Iraq: Death Squads Come in Waves
William A.
Cook
Causes
and Consequences: Bush, Osama and Israel
January 8 /
9, 2005
Alexander Cockburn
Say,
Waiter, Where's the Blood in My Margarita Glass?
John H. Summers
Chomsky
and Academic History
Greg Moses
Getting Real About the Draft
Walter A. Davis
Bible Says: the Psychology of Christian Fundamentalism
Victor Kattan
The EU and Middle East Peace
John Bolender
The Plight of Iraq's Mandeans
Robert Fisk
The Politics of Lebanon
Fred Gardner
Situation NORML
Joe Bageant
The Politics of the Comfort Zone
Mickey Z.
I Want My DDT: Little Nicky Kristof Bugs Out
Ben Tripp
CounterClockwise Evolution
Ron Jacobs
Elvis and His Truck: Out on Highway 61
Saul Landau
Sex
and the Country
Rep. Cynthia McKinney
Time to End the Blackout
Ellen Cantarow
NPR's Distortions on Palestine
Richard Oxman
Bageantry Continued
Poets' Basement
Gaffney, Landau, Albert, Collins
January 7,
2005
Omar Barghouti
Slave
Sovereignty: Elections Under Occupation
Kent Paterson
The Framing of Felipe Arreaga: Another Mexican Environmentalist
Arrested
Niranjan Ramakrishnan
Old
Vijay Merchant and the Tsunami
David Krieger
Cancel the Inauguration Parties
Gideon Levy
New Year, Old Story
Dave Lindorff
Ohio Protest: First Shot Fired by Congressional Progressives
Christopher
Brauchli
Privatizing the IRS
Roger Burbach
/ Paul Cantor
Bush,
the Pentagon and the Tsunami
January 6,
2005
Brian J. Foley
Gonzales:
Supporting Torture is not His Greatest Sin
Greg Moses
Boot
Up America!: Gen. Helmly's Memo Leaks New Bush Deal
Petras / Chomsky
An
Open Letter to Hugo Chavez
Alan Maass
The Decline of the Dollar
Dave Lindorff
Colin Powell's Selective Sense of Horror
Jenna Orkin
The EPA and a Dirty Bomb: 9/11's Disastrous Precedent
P. Sainath
The
Tsunami and India's Coastal Poor
January 5,
2005
Alan Farago
2004:
An Environmental Retrospective
Winslow T.
Wheeler
Oversight
Detected?: Sen. McCain and the Boeing Tanker Scam
Jean-Guy Allard
Gary Webb: a Cuban Perspective
Fred Gardner
Strutting, Smirking, As If The Mad Plan Was Working
David Swanson
Albert Parsons on the Gallows
Richard Oxman
The Joe Bageant Interview
Bruce Jackson
Death
on the Living Room Floor
January 4,
2005
Michael Ortiz
Hill
Mainlining
Apocalypse
Elaine Cassel
They
Say They Can Lock You Up for Life Without a Trial
Yoram Gat
The
Year in Torture
Martin Khor
Tragic
Tales and Urgent Tasks from the Tsunami Disaster
Gary Leupp
Death
and Life in the Andaman Islands
January 3,
2005
Ron Jacobs
The
War Hits Home
Dave Lindorff
Is
There a Single Senator Who Will Stand Up for Black Voters?
Mike Whitney
The Guantanamo Gulag
Joshua Frank
Greens and Republicans: Strange Bedfellows
Maria Tomchick
Playing Politics with Disaster Aid
Rhoda and Mark
Berenson
Our Daughter Lori: Another Year of Grave Injustice
David Swanson
The Media and the Ohio Recount
Kathleen Christison
Patronizing
the Palestinians
January 1 /
2, 2005
Gary Leupp
Earthquakes
and End Times, Past and Present
Rev. William
E. Alberts
On "Moral Values": Code Words for Emerging Authoritarian
Tendencies
M. Shahid Alam
Testing Free Speech in America
Stan Goff
A Period for Pedagogy
Brian Cloughley
Bush and the Tsunami: the Petty and the Petulant
Sylvia Tiwon
/ Ben Terrall
The Aftermath in Aceh
Ben Tripp
Requiem for 2004
Greg Moses
A Visible Future?
Steven Sherman
The 2004 Said Awards: Books Against Empire
Sean Donahue
The Erotics of Nonviolence
James T. Phillips
The Beast's Belly
David Krieger
When Will We Ever Learn
Poets' Basement
Soderstrom, Hamod, Louise and Albert

December 23,
2004
Chad Nagle
Report
from Kiev: Yushchenko's Not Quite Ready for Sainthood
David Smith-Ferri
The
Real UN Disgrace in Iraq
Bill Quigley
Death
Watch for Human Rights in Haiti
Mickey Z.
Crumbs
from Our Table
Christopher Brauchli
Merck's Merry X-mas
Greg Moses
When
No Law Means No Law
Alan Singer
An
Encounter with Sen. Schumer: a Very Dangerous Democrat
David Price
Social
Security Pump and Dump
Website of the Day
Gabbo Gets Laid

December 22,
2004
James Petras
An
Open Letter to Saramago: Nobel Laureate Suffers from a Bizarre
Historical Amnesia
Omar Barghouti
The Case for Boycotting Israel
Patrick Cockburn / Jeremy Redmond
They Were Waiting on Chicken Tenders When the Rounds Hit
Harry Browne
Northern Ireland: No Postcards from the Edge
Richard Oxman
On the Seventh Column
Kathleen Christison
Imagining
Palestine
Website of the Day
FBI Torture Memos
December 21,
2004
Greg Moses
The
New Zeus on the Block: Unplugging Al-Manar TV
Dave Lindorff
Losing
It in America: Bunker of the Skittish
Chad Nagle
The View from Donetsk
Dragon Pierces
Truth*
Concrete
Colossus vs. the River Dragon: Dislocation and Three Gorges Dam
Patrick Cockburn
"Things Always Get Worse"
Seth DeLong
Aiding Oppression in Haiti
Ahmad Faruqui
Pakistan and the 9/11 Commission's Report
Paul Craig
Roberts
America
Locked Up: a System of Injustice







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January 21, 2005
Gold-Plated
Activism?
The
Problem with Mike Ruppert
By
KURT NIMMO
On January 15th, at Kane Hall, on the
campus of the University of Washington in Seattle, former L.A.
cop and self-described 9/11 investigator Mike Ruppert told a
standing-room only crowd the obvious:
"[Ruppert] believes that
no sanctions, indictments or criminal prosecution [against the
Bush warmongers] will ever be handed down. Rubicon [Ruppert's
book], he says, remains a base map of the decades before and
the years since 9/11. But now he says we must look at the herd
of elephants charging at us, instead of the one elephant that
just ran us over," Ken Levine summarizes on Ruppert's From
the Wilderness website.
No kidding.
Of course Bush and Crew will
never face indictment or criminal prosecution, at least not under
current conditions. That's not how it works. Evidence of this
abounds: Henry Kissinger, one of the most notorious war criminals
of recent history, walks around a free man, as does Bill Clinton,
responsible for invading the former Yugoslavia, imposing murderous
sanctions on Iraq---killing hundreds of thousands of Iraqis,
mostly kids---and blowing up a pharmaceutical factory in the
Sudan (el-Shifa), an especially vile war crime that resulted
in massive suffering a death. Bush Senior is responsible for
deliberately bombing Iraq's water purification system, an act
of premeditated savagery resulting in untold disease and death,
and yet he walks around a free man too. Instead of war criminals,
these guys are considered "elder statesmen," the substance
of best selling books and CNN and Fox News interviews. Millions
of Americans revere them.
Dispensing more dubious information,
Ruppert told the crowd to put their money, "or whatever
cash we have left, into precious metals; that we must rid ourselves
of debt, get out of the stock market and begin to think about
a more self-sufficient living style. We must reduce personal
consumption."
Said just like a wealthy Libertarian.
It was obviously an evening
tailored for the middle class, the sort of people who have enough
money to buy Ruppert's book and apparently have problems with
"personal consumption," that is to say buying things
they don't need with credit cards. Precious metals aside, millions
of Americans are finding it increasingly difficult to pay for
shelter and food. Millions of Americans, living hand-to-mouth
on Walmart wages, have absolutely no money to put into gold or
silver and thus feed themselves after "a tremendous devaluation
of the dollar" hits, as predicted by Ruppert and more than
a few economists.
For instance, as an unemployed
web designer and photographer, I have no money for gold ingots
or silver coins. I have lived a more or less Spartan lifestyle
for years and do not rush out to the mall to buy the latest consumerist
thingamajig as advertised on television (in fact, I don't watch
television). I do not own a home--sorry, no mortgages for the
unemployed--and own a car only because I have little other choice
in this society as presently arranged (unless I want to walk
five or ten or however many miles every day to a job I can't
seem to find, thanks to Bush's war economy). Mike offers no solution
for people like me, living precariously near the economic periphery.
As Mike apparently sees it, I am cosigned to a fate of pushing
a wheelbarrow down Main Street, piled with useless greenbacks
to buy a loaf of bread, like German paupers of yore.
But enough about me.
For many Americans--an increasing
number of Americans--Mike Ruppert offers nothing except scary
predictions of "peak oil" and a weak palliative while
hawking his latest book and "treating" his audience
to "some very important and poignant 'new releases,'"
likely soon available to Ruppert fans who have credit cards and
can afford to shell out the bucks for additional "personal
consumption," be it Ruppert's book or Nintendo Gamecube
Platinum. Instead of urging political action, he tells Americans
to invest in gold, sounding oddly like an investment banker or
somebody from the gold industry. Ruppert may call Dick Cheney
"a murderer," again stating the obvious, but offers
no concrete solution for getting rid of such multiple and repeat
felons beyond slimming down the consumption habits of middle
class Americans in preparation for the Grapes of Wrath, the sequel.
If he did offer other political alternatives, they were not mentioned
in the article penned by Mike's agent, Ken Levine. But then,
I suppose, to get the whole story we have to buy Mike's book.
Finally, until Americans wake
up from their corporate media induced somnolence--taking the
utterances of right-wingers at Fox News as the gospel truth--many
of them will not only support Bush's up-coming invasions and
occupations of Iran and Syria (or at least his "shock and
awe" bombardment of these countries), but they will blissfully
continue to drive gas-guzzling SUVs and consume useless consumer
junk right up to the moment the economy crashes, as Ruppert correctly
predicts.
Unfortunately, precious few
of them will have stockpiles of gold and silver, presumably stuffed
in their mattresses, metal we are to assume they will use to
barter for food and shelter. If the impending collapse of the
U.S. economy--precipitated by a falling dollar and deficits run
up by Bush's war machine and the unconscionable greed and squander
of rich people and multinational corporations--translates into
anything positive, it will be massive and unrelenting activism
on the part of average Americans, same as the last time the economy
tanked and people were pitched into misery and suffering. For
as Howard Zinn notes, during the so-called Great Depression social
activism reached a fever pitch, threatening government and the
ruling elite, although this is not a story you will read in corporate
published school textbooks.
Of course, in order to save
predatory capitalism and stave off serious reform, if not the
trashing of the entire system, Roosevelt hurriedly passed a few
amelioratory laws--including Social Security, now under attack--and,
more importantly, embroiled America in the largest and most destructive
war in modern history, effectively channeling anger directed
against a parasitical system in another direction, namely against
foreign enemies who were, as the Bush family history attests,
supported and financed by the very people responsible for the
Great Depression.
Instead of urging a few hundred
middle class people to buy gold and stop frivolous consumption,
Mike Ruppert should tell them to prepare for the struggle ahead--a
social revolution that will either result in change of a predatory
system, lorded over by "murderers" such as Dick Cheney,
or yet another diversionary tactic, a shuffling of the deck that
will result in more of the same, albeit with a few minor "reforms"
put into place.
No amount of hoarded gold will
make a whit of difference.
Kurt Nimmo is a photographer and multimedia developer
in Las Cruces, New Mexico. Visit his excellent no holds barred
blog at www.kurtnimmo.com/
. Nimmo is a contributor to Cockburn and St. Clair's,
The
Politics of Anti-Semitism. A collection of his essays
for CounterPunch, Another
Day in the Empire, is now available from Dandelion Books.
He can be reached at: nimmo@zianet.com
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