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Tortured Logic

December 10, 2014 by costaricaguy 1 Comment

Tortured Logic

It has now become painfully apparent that the CIA, in pursuit of Bush administration war policy, used torture as an accepted interrogation technique.

And lied, wilfully, to the American public about the full extent of said use.

Now comes the scramble, mostly on the right, to justify that…

to make it OK.

But many of us know that it’s not OK.

If it were, then why the painstaking attempts at covering it up when it was taking place?

I saw the Bill O’Reilly talking points clip in which he says, “it is morally correct to [use torture] to protect innocent lives from barbarians.”

He justifies the use of torture because he knows people who lost loved ones in the 9-11 attack.

Now let’s consider that for a moment…

We, meaning us in the U.S., aren’t alone on this planet.

We’re not the only ones who’ve lost loved ones in war.

In fact, there are many who’ve lost them at our very hands.

So, does that mean that the Iraqi version of Bill O’Reilly would be correct in saying the same thing…

that it’s “morally correct” to use torture against Americans?

No, of course in that case it wouldn’t be.

Well, then according to what tortured logic is it OK for us to use it?

There is strong evidence that torture does not “protect innocent lives from barbarians.” That the only thing it does is extract words out of the mouths of its victims in order to make the suffering stop.

Even Senator John McCain, a man who knows a bit about torture, said as much.

So, why then, did the CIA persist in its use? Why would they sacrifice our values for no real useful purpose?

Perhaps, retributive justice?

You see, back when this was going on, our collective anger at the rest of the world, especially the Muslim world, was at a fevered pitch.

We wanted blood.

It’s kind of like when Michael Brown’s stepfather yelled to the crowd, “burn this MF down!”

We were collectively yelling, “burn those entire MF’ing countries down!”

Do whatever it takes to exact justice on those who had the gall to attack us on our own soil.

That anger was understandable, both in the Brown case and in the 9-11 one.

But it doesn’t justify lawless action…and that’s what torture is.

Why?

Because torture offends common human decency. We just don’t treat other human beings that way…regardless of the circumstances.

There were times when it was commonplace…but we recoil at those barbaric times. In fact, just hearing about what was done in those “dark prison” dungeons is revolting, isn’t it?

If you say not, then you need to go see a professional about that.

I’m pretty upset about this torture report. What upsets me even more deeply is the reaction, or lack of reaction, of many towards it. It’s as if it really doesn’t matter.

We got rough with some bad guys, so what?

You see, the “so what” is, IMHO, that the very fact that some would justify torture as being OK when it comes to us…but a horrible war crime when committed by anyone else…points to a serious problem in the American mindset, at least the one held by around 150 million of us…

This idea of America being so “exceptional” that the rules just don’t apply to us.

That’s a dangerous concept for anyone living outside of our borders.

One that might make them not like us all that much…

perhaps even want to destroy us.

In fact, it’s a mindset that makes the world a more dangerous place for all of its inhabitants.

The very fact that we think the rules are suspended when it comes to us, lends to a mindset that devalues other people.

That the idea of “all men being created with inalienable rights” really only means, all “American men.”

But we know that’s not true, right?

At least I hope we do.

This torture report could potentially be the dawning of that realization.

The dawning of the concept of The Big US.

image credit: Shrieking Tree via Compfight cc

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Filed Under: The Big US Tagged With: Bill O'Reilly, the big us, torture report

Be The Change

April 23, 2014 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

be the change

The Revolutionary Misfit site and the mindset of Impact Mindfulness is about recognizing the need for and implementing change.

Change in ourselves and in the world at large.

But there are serious barriers to the change we seek.

And those barriers have a lot to do with entrenched ways of thinking about the world and the U.S. role in it.

I am a frequent critic of Fox News.

That’s no secret as I have been vocal about it in my older blog, Costa Rica Guy.

I believe Fox News is one of the staunchest defenders of the status quo stream of thought …

a barrier to change…

and therefore a threat to humanity.

Wow…I realize those are some pretty strong words…

but nevertheless, I believe words that need to be spoken (or written).

I recently ran across a video from a few years back in which Bill O’Reilly was interviewing a young man who had lost his father in the 9-11 tragedy.

His name was Jeremy and O’Reilly had him on the show for the sole reason of attacking him for signing a petition against the war in Iraq.

Jeremy made the “outrageous” claim that perhaps the U.S. had been partly responsible for creating an environment in the middle east that would give rise to a group like Al-Qaeda.

And that invading Iraq would only exacerbate the situation.

O’Reilly, who is known for his sometimes violent on-air meltdowns directed at guests who dare to disagree with his world-view, had one of his worse (and scariest) moments.

O’Reilly claimed that Jeremy had a “warped view” of this world and of the U.S.

And that Jeremy’s father would certainly be ashamed…

even though O’Reilly didn’t have a clue about the geo-political views of Jeremy’s deceased dad.

Now, I’m pretty sure that O’Reilly has heard of a fellow named Kermit Roosevelt, Jr.

Kermit was the grandson of President Teddy Roosevelt. He was also a CIA agent who orchestrated a coup d’etat in Iran that overthrew the democratically elected Mohammad Mosaddegh (who nationalized the oil industry) and replaced him with the U.S. (and British) choice of Mohammad Rezâ Šâh Pahlavi, aka, the Shah of Iran.

And if you’re as old as I am, you’ll remember that this action didn’t sit too well with Iranian citizens, who ultimately deposed the Shah himself in a revolution that culminated in the taking of 52 American hostages for 444 days.

Now, I don’t think Jeremy was specifically referring to those incidences when he drew out O’Reilly’s rage…

but they are historic facts.

The U.S. has done things in the middle east that have pissed people off. It’s not that they “hate our way of life” as many on the right like to say…

It’s that we have screwed around in their affairs, usually for oil-related reasons, in ways that have made life difficult for some people…

generally the poorest some people (who also happen to be the majority).

In much the same way that the U.S. screwed around in the affairs of almost every single country in Latin American!

Yea, they’re pissed too. I know. I frequently hear about it from my neighbors.

But if you dare mention any of this on the O’Reilly show, you’ll be violently dismissed as a left-wing nut job…

and probably have your mic cut.

Why is that?

OK, here’s my point…

Change will only come when we can discard O’Reilly’s gospel of the status quo…

the one that suggests that “America” is somehow singularly (well, perhaps along with Great Britain and Israel) endowed with some absurd notion of manifest destiny to rule the world with it’s brand of capitalistic-fueled consumption.

It’s a view imbued or infused with religious notions.

And O’Reilly is as intolerant with this quasi-religious notion of “the way things are” as is Al-Qaeda with it’s radical Islamic views.

Intolerance breeds intolerance.

Maybe O’Reilly would have done well to shut up himself and listened, really listened, to what Jeremy was trying to say?

American-style capitalism and consumption is NOT a right bestowed by god.

I’m afraid nothing is going to change until the majority can get that notion out of their collective (and extremely hard) heads.

Not holding out much hope for O’Reilly, however.

But for you…

yes I am.

To be the change starts with that muscle upstairs!

It’s not un-American to embrace truth…

and change.

Listen, it’s NOT the intent of this blog to convince anyone that “America” is bad…

However, it is the intent of this blog to encourage people to open their minds about how it’s possibly true that certain American notions of the way things are…

really aren’t at all.

In impact mindfulness parlance, we call that removing impact blinders.

And unless and until the majority of folks in the biggest and richest country in the world can do just that…

the change this blog seeks just ain’t gonna happen.

image credit: khoory123 via Compfight cc

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders Tagged With: Bill O'Reilly, removing impact blinders

All Things Being Unequal

April 11, 2014 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

all things being unequal

I’m gonna break with my new blog guideline of not getting too current event-y by addressing the feud that has recently erupted between Stephen Colbert and Bill O’Reilly.

Well, we all know it’s always existed, simmering beneath the surface of Colbert’s papa-bear parody…

Bottom line: they don’t like each other all that much.

OK, so here’s my take…

O’Reilly seriously (well, I guess seriously) believes there is something seriously amiss in “America.”

And he blames it all on a progressive push for equality.

An idea championed by our current Commander in Chief along with all those ideologues on the radical left.

According to O’Reilly, Colbert’s true progressive agenda…

behind the facade of pretending to be O’Reilly’s bombastic alter-ego…

is equality…

the insidious idea that is tearing our country to shreds.

You see, in O’Reilly’s worldview there is a distinct and entirely unequal cultural stratification…

it is just the way things are supposed to be.

You have those such as O’Reilly himself…the cultural elite…

recently, to Bill’s chagrin, progressively degraded as those loathsome 1%’ers…

Then you have that great big bulge in the middle known as “regular folk”…

a pretty big group, so big in fact that O’Reilly only has to rely on about 50% of them to keep him in his coveted elite position…

And down below them are those low-class thugs who must be kept in their places in order to serve those above.

That’s just the way it’s always been and that’s the way it is.

Equality is, what did Bill call it, an opium-lased dream, or something like that??

Or a socialist idea at best.

Bill is very adept at reinforcing his point with airtight analogies such as his inability to beat his fellow Irishman, Shaquille Rashaun O’Neal, in a friendly game of one-on-one.

That certainly justifies or explains the widening income  inequality gap??

OK Bill we’ll all admit with ya that people are not equal.

They’re not equal in physical strength and stature, looks, intelligence, education, experience and a whole host of other factors.

But they (we) are all equal in the following senses…

-in the sense of those inalienable rights our declaration speaks of…

-and in the sense of a right to not be exploited…

-and to live with dignity…

-and to have the same opportunity regardless of the circumstances in which one begins…

-and to be able to live our lives the way we please, as long as it doesn’t interfere with your ability to do the same.

-and to expect that those who govern us will do so with the aforementioned senses in mind

-and not “stack the deck” to the favor of Bill’s cultural class.

I don’t think Colbert’s disguised progressive agenda is to make us all NBA stars on the level of Shaq…

It’s possibly to simply make sure that the senses in which we ARE equal are respected…

or at least paid a little more attention to.

And he does so in a humorous way that does get people’s attention…

it certainly has O’Reilly’s.

That’s what the Revolutionary Misfit idea of “we’re all in this boat together” is similarly trying to convey.

You know, that Big US thing that this blog often harps about.

The concept of The Big US is not about diminishing the distinctions that make the human mosaic so colorful and interesting…

But to make sure that we’re all working together to save the sinking ship.

A sunk ship tends to clarify one sense in which we are all equal…equally dead.

O’Reilly thankfully admits that the ship is indeed sinking…

or leaking profusely.

But I disagree with his premise that striving for less inequality is what’s causing the cultural chasms to develop in the hull.

I would go so far as to say that his ideological notion of all things being unequal is exactly why those chasms are there…

and growing.

image credit: Thrift Store Diva via Compfight cc

Filed Under: The Big US Tagged With: Bill O'Reilly, Stephen Colbert, the big us

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