Fear This Factor : I can't believe this is my life... but in a good way.
Updated: 11/22/2004; 3:51:44 PM.

 

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Thursday, October 28, 2004

5 years ago...

...was around the exact time that I began traveling internationally for business. I traveled to Africa, Europe and Asia and I saw that my country, while not loved, was at least respected. The government of the United States was seen as all-powerful, but mainly benevolent and President Clinton was loved as much for his faults as for his talents.

During that time this nation was rich, it seemed like everyone who wanted a job had one and the possibilities of the future seemed endless.

Now I go overseas and see my nation not respected nor loved but instead feared. I see nation after nation looking at the United States as a country to be avoided and not emulated. I see President Bush loathed, hated, not respected and most of all, feared. Feared as a reckless, messianic man who claims kinship with God but instead knows only God's opposite: war and death. Who claimed when running for office he wanted to lead a "humble America" but instead has led the nation as if he's an emperor. He and his cohorts pretend they know the way and don't question them.

A terrifying thing, little noticed by the media, happened this August. For the first time in living memory the Treasury Department held an auction of US Treasury bills and no one bought. For the first time in history foreigners are refusing to invest in what was previously the safest investment around, US T-bills.

Now you make think this matters little. I can hear the Republicans now: "Who cares if foreigners buy our T-bills, we can do without them!" Wrong. The US depends on the largess of foreign governments to subsidize the massive budget deficit created by Bush's reckless fiscal policies and if they don't... well, the consequences are too terrible to ponder.I'd guess the likeliest is  a deflationary spiral leading to the collapse of the stock market and a new depression.

Where I'm going with all this is that one again tonight I leave for Asia on business and I'll be gone until November 20. I leave behind a country heading towards ruin if it continues to be led by George W. Bush. Every person I know has said if the election is stolen again they'll take to the streets and use the last method available to us to enforce the will of the people, violence. As American citizens we're taught very early that violence to change the government is the last option, but a viable one if other methods have been exhausted. When your vote counts for little and the courts back up the thieves then what choice do the people have left?

I don't know what's going to happen but my gut says Kerry will win. If he doesn't and the election is again tainted by fraud and thievery used by the Republicans then we're in for some rough, rough times. I leave here an American who still has faith in the system I believe is the best in the world. I hope to God I return feeling the same way.


7:07:39 PM    Comment on my obvious brilliance []

Sometimes...

                                            

                                                           Arafat the homie

Now I don't wish for the death of anyone, no matter how much I hate them. That kind of karma is just too much for me to have to deal with.

Still, there is an inescapable truth that sometimes the death of a single person can improve the lives of an enormous number of people. It is fact that certain people stand in the way of peace, or development or justice and the only way these things can occur is with their demise.

Jonas Savimbi - Angola

Jonas Savimbi was the leader of Unita, a group dedicated to fighting the Marxist-Leninist government of Angola since Angola's independence in the 1970's. Supported for a time by the United States he signed a peace treaty in 1990 with the Angolan government mandating free elections and his participation in a government of unity. Except it didn't work out that way. When UNITA lost the elections it went back to war, led by Savimbi.

Devastating the entire country, UNITA degenerated into a rag-tag group of gangsters. They terrorized and raped their way through Angola, depopulating huge swathes of the countryside and dealing in stolen diamonds.

All of this ceased with Savimbi's death in 2002 when Israeli-trained Angolan troops burst in on Savimbi's hideout and shot him 17 times. Two days a cease-fire was declared. Six weeks later a permanent peace treaty was signed.

I could go on and on with the deaths of those (Hitler, Ceausescu) but I won't. Suffice to say that sometimes the death of an ineffective and corrupt leader can lead to wonderful things for a nation and its people. If you have doubts just ask any Romanian or Angolan today.


12:43:02 PM    Comment on my obvious brilliance []

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