Monday, February 27, 2006
Globalism; Mission (Almost) Accomplished. Two items.
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(1) Corporationism. A reader in Britain commented on yesterday's blog.
What a great article condemning corporate globalism! * * *
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Your mention of "Divine Efficiency" made me think of 112 Gripes about the French, a 1945 US Army booklet.
72. "The French are not as efficient as the Germans in large scale, mass production."
The French are not as efficient as the Germans in building tanks, guns, planes, flame-throwers, concentration camps and torture chambers.
The French are not efficient in starting wars. The Germans are. German efficiency is used against peaceful, decent people.
What does "efficiency" really mean? Is it only a matter of output and production charts and impressive statistics? Are the Germans more "efficient" in providing happiness or peace to their people? Are the Germans more "efficient" in building decency, kindness, respect for human life? Has German "efficiency" led to greater wisdom, better art, deeper morals, finer philosophies?
A prison is one of the most "efficient" institutions man ever created - but who wants to live in it?
We defeated Nazism. We can defeat globalist corporationism.
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(2) Iraq Almost Destroyed. The Radical Zionists who ordered the United States to destroy Iraq must be chortling happily to themselves now that the U.S. invasion has brought Iraq to the brink of civil war, a war that will complete the mission of destroying Iraq as a threat to Israel forever.
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That's not what we went into Iraq to accomplish? I'm afraid it is.
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The people of Iraq might yet surprise us, and find a way to make peace, live together, and rebuild Iraq into a major force in the region. That would end all that laffing in Israel.
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Iraq's 4,000 years of history suggest a resilience others can only envy. But current developments strain Iraq's greatness of spirit. I hope that Iraqis can pull together and rise above their current difficulties to reclaim the respect of nations.
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Iran is trying to recapture the greatness of ancient Persia. Iraq may yet reclaim the greatness of ancient Babylonia or Assyria.
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(The current U.S. military death toll in Iraq, according to the website "Iraq Coalition Casualties", is 2,294.)