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2004 journals
April 1 'What lies ahead'
March 9 'The knock on the PM's door at midnight'
February 13 'Netizens of the world unite'
February 3 'Hey Ho from the world social forum'
2003 journals
December 16 'The three hit men from the west'
November 17 'How Iraq is re-shaping the future'
October 30 'How to rescue the future'
September 25 'The mass production of serial killers'
September 5 'Poor fellah my planet'
August 7 'Slam Bam thank you frisco'
July 10 'From PornoPopϨ ro agit prop, the coming age of social justce.
June 16 'The doors of deception, a death metal soundtrack'
May 26 'Murdering the matrix, marketing missiles, marrying machines'
May 8 'Smile, you're on combat camera'
April 12 'Proud to be a peacenik'
April 1 'Forty years ago today'
March 27 'Uncle Sam's underwear'
February 26 'The art of war, the poetry of freedom, a jittery pope'
February 12 'Why the warhorses stomp and snort'
January 28 'Getin' ready for a good ol' Texan Barbecue'
2002 journals
December 29 'Maybe Dr Evil isn't who you think'
November 4 Balaclavas, shock-jocks & Lean Cuisine for the Conscience
October 21 Sick of the Sound of My Own Voice
September 23 The Divine Right of US Citizens
August 22 The cook, the wife, two dogs, the CIA, a mobile, a Massacre
August 17 32 Revelations about the War that Never Ends
August 2 Fuming Fathers & Pedophile Bishops
June 26 Pre-emptive strikes, bad acid & collective guilt
June 10 Lock Up Your Daughters
May 30 High Tea with the Black Dwarf
May 24 Refugee Blues & wild accusations
May 22 Back Among the Gum Trees in Fortress Oz
April 10 Beyond Good and Evil
April 1 Bloody Easter, Joyful Nation
February 26 The 14 wiley whoppers of Philip Ruddock
January 31 Making the world a better place for arms dealers, millionaires and screwed up weirdos
2001 journals
December 29 Ruddock - Wanted
December 28 Hi - Christmas and New Year Message
December 23 Good & Evil, Beyond Rich & Poor, the legacy of Islam's Holy Killer
November 23 For Truth, Lies, Paranoia, Cruelty & the Truth that can't be Silenced.
November 7 Eek - Censorship is back!... Or am I paranoid?
October 25 Death of global consciousness, the decline of CNN, the brutality of warlords, East & West
October 13 Citizens!.. A new awakening or the same Old Testament
October 1 But what would you do if you were George Bush?
August 12 A bull with future shock

Let them drink Coke

Journal of a Futurist - 12 April 2003

Proud to be a Peacenik

Let’s be honest. The fall of a tyrant is a moment of bliss, no matter how it happens. The world is well rid of Saddam Hussein. Dancing in the streets as the statues tumbled was a joy to behold, as brief as it was. And as staged as it was. In the morning, the hangover. The rough justice of the White House leaves a trail of gore. As I write, Iraq burns, hospitals are plundered, terrified citizens arm against mobs and wail, “now we face a thousand Saddam Husseins”.

The gloating of Donald Rumsfeld’s turns to rage. He damns the non embedded media for failing to focus on sergeants kissing babies. “It’s just a little untidy”, he says, as we watch a street mob murder a teenager. I am stunned by tonight’s footage of a deeply traumatised boy in Bagdad who is carried to a hospital in his father’s arms, only to find the gates locked. Other hospitals overflow with weeping, limbless children. It is the second day of liberation.

What do the Iraqis really think? That the cost is too high, say some. Worth every shattered bone, say others. My own opinion counts for little, but you’ll get it anyway. The fall of Hussein is likely to brighten the long term future of the Iraqis. The rise of super-tech warlords is likely to darken the prospect of creating a fair, diverse & sustainable world. If the Bush White House achieves its goal of forging another American Century, at whatever cost, welcome to Texas justice forever.

Reasons to be cheerful - and morose

Here’s a few reasons to feel good about having opposed the American War machine:

  • Without your massive, worldwide protests, the bloodbath would have been bloodier, the marines even more trigger-happy.
  • Despite its Kodak moment, the war remains illegal and unscrupulous; its legacy a danger to the world. Any nation is now fair game. You played your part in protesting the doctrine of pre-emptive strike.
  • The weeding out of prohibited weapons was proceeding apace, without the need to slaughter children. Along with the proposed addition of UN troops, the inspection teams could have evolved into a surgical wedge for toppling the tyrant from within. Hans Blix: "We had the door slammed in our faces. I had a sense before the (US) decision to go to war, they were irritated by our work”. Instead, the White House has reinforced the option of military invasion as an acceptable instrument of national policy - something the world will come to regret. You can tell your children you marched to find alternative ways to resolve global conflicts.

Don’t Mention the Uniforms

The war is waged with lies and tricks. To this day, almost 50 per cent of Americans believe Saddam Hussein was a key instigator of 9/11. (That’s why the US flag that was briefly draped across Saddam’s teetering face in Fardus Square is the very one that was flying over the Pentagon on the day of the September attacks. Lucky it happened to be lying around. Strange too that the spontaneous upsurge of pro American fervour took place opposite the Palestine Hotel, a media barracks. Several of the enthusiastic Iraqi participants, it now turns out, are known associates of US forces – see www.chicago.indymedia.org

The British were reduced to plagiarising a mouldy student essay to justify its fantasy that Saddam threatened London, (“Tony Blair stole my homework”). Leaks from peacenik insiders helped to expose such Orwellian tactics as the US bugging of Security Council members and the bribing of cash-strapped nations into token compliance. Despite claims of “extraordinary precision”, Iraqi hospitals are now rivers of blood in which children’s limbs are amputated without anaesthetics or even aspirin, just like in Afghanistan, (a dim memory for the West, but not to Afghanis). Weapons outlawed by global treaties, like cluster bombs and depleted uranium, were rained down upon the innocent with gusto. Hawks uphold cruelty. You stand for civilised values.

You also stand for common sense. “Stars & stripes Baghdad” will seed the future with hate.

Deluded apologists try to liken the conflict to World War 2. But the analogy only works in reverse. Iraq did not invade a small inferior power. We did. Even to call it a war is to claim a patina of legitimacy it doesn’t deserve. More like an elephant sitting on a flea. True, the flea took a few bites, even without an air force, and got itself accused of contravening the Geneva Convention. Asked at a Pentagon press conference why it is OK for American commando troops to take off their uniforms, but a crime when the Iraqis do it, Defence Department hard hat, Victoria Clarke, deferred the question for a later answer. We’re still waiting. Without the alertness of peaceniks on the web, such gems would rarely see the light of print.

The Kind of Mindset Running this War

Astute legal brains argue our invasion is a breach of UN resolution 1441. And it defied the known wishes of the majority of Security Council members, despite the bribes. This is relevant when it comes to pursuing war criminals. Only with continued peacenik pressure are we likely to see the spotlight put on atrocities committed by the Coalition. Despite all the talk of “extraordinary precision”, civilian casualties were excessive, whether at checkpoints, in the crossfire (“The chick got in the way” - a US Marine) in media centres, in residential areas. “UK troops in the Iraqi southern port city of Umm Qasr set up mass graves in the city to cover up hard evidence of committing massacres that claimed the lives of some 200 Iraqis in the first days of the war”, eyewitnesses reportedly told IslamOnline.net. They said the British left a lot of wounded Iraqis scattered across the streets without treatment, noting that the locals tried to treat them but were prevented by the UK soldiers. If so, this is a war crime. Who will prosecute it? While the Coalition refuses to count the dead, the peaceniks are keeping a tally.

According to the London Financial Times, April 11, a British official estimated that about 20,000-25,000 Iraqi soldiers had been killed in the three weeks of this conflict, mainly in what he described as "carnage" caused by coalition bombing. “But given the scale of the destruction of the Iraqi army, this figure could well be an underestimate”. Keep in mind that this army of supposed bogeymen was largely comprised of unwilling, starving conscripts, whose lives are of no less worth than that of rescued US prisoner of war, Jessica Lynch, soon to be a major motion picture.

Over and above highlighting Pentagon doubletalk, peaceniks play an important role in holding up the mirror to the kind of mindset that is running this war. It isn’t pretty. When rumour had it that Saddam Hussein was skulking in a residential area of Baghdad, the US dropped its bombs of mass destruction without a moment’s thought for who was in harm’s way.

Over and above highlighting Pentagon doubletalk, peaceniks play an important role in holding up the mirror to the kind of mindset that is running this war. It isn’t pretty. When rumour had it that Saddam Hussein was skulking in a residential area of Baghdad, the US dropped its bombs of mass destruction without a moment’s thought for who might be in harm’s way.

“A young woman's severed head and torso and a small boy's body were pulled from a smoking crater carved into the earth by four U.S. bombs, so powerful they yanked orange trees from their roots”, reported Hamza Hendawi of Associated Press. “When the broken body of the 20-year-old woman was brought out torso first, then the head, her mother started crying uncontrollably, then collapsed.”

Saddam’s whereabouts remaining unknown. Asked about this mishap, Victoria Clarke, the US defence department’s gritty answer to Mohammed Saeed al Sahaf , replied, "I don't think that matters very much. I'm not losing sleep trying to figure out if he was in there." She may not have lost any sleep, but she has certainly lost her humanity. Victoria’s secret, and those of her colleagues, is that she has entered the war machine’s matrix, the zone of the emotionally dead.

The role of the peacenik is to prevent this disease from becoming a plague.

Ends.

Richard Neville’s juicy paperpack, AmeriKa Psycho is available now from http://www.amazon.com