Stuck
Pigs (and Presstitutes) Squeal
by
Paul Craig Roberts
Recently
by Paul Craig Roberts: The
Critics of 9/11 Truth: Do They Have A Case?
As an economist
I have never had much patience with Paul Krugman’s economics, stuck
as he is in 1940s-era Keynesian demand-side economics. I have sometimes
concluded that Krugman had rather denounce Ronald Reagan that to
acknowledge that supply-side economists have established that fiscal
policy has supply-side, not just demand-side, effects.
However, Krugman
does display at times a moral conscience. He did so on September
11 in his New York Times column, "The
Years of Shame." Krugman wrote that 9/11 was hijacked by
"fake heros" who used the event "to justify an unrelated
war the neocons wanted to fight" and that "our professional
pundits" lent their support to the misuse of the event.
The stuck pigs,
of course, squealed loudly. The war criminal, Donald Rumsfeld, publicly
cancelled his New York Times subscription, and the complicit
presstitutes in Washington’s wars of aggression jumped on Krugman
with spikes and hatchets.
Perhaps Krugman
meant to use the plural and say "unrelated wars."
The US government has made war on Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya,
resulting in massive destruction of homes, infrastructure, and lives
of civilians, all in the name of one lie or the other. In addition,
the US government is conducting military operations against the
populations of three more Muslim countries Pakistan, Yemen, and
Somalia, with extensive loss of civilian life in Pakistan, a US
ally. Drones are sent in week after week that blow up schools, medical
centers, and farm communities, and each time Washington announces
that they have killed "militants," "al Qaeda,"
"Taliban leaders."
Thanks to what
Krugman calls "our professional pundits" and Gerald Celente
calls "presstitutes," the American people know little
if anything about the murder of countless civilians and displacement
of millions of others in these six Muslim countries, which the Bush/Obama
governments regard as "security threats," or habitats
of small elements that are "security threats," to the
single super-power.
Before I continue,
think for a minute about the level of threat posed by these Muslim
countries that lack internal unity, an air force, a navy, a modern
army, and nuclear ICBMs. Compare this "threat" to the
Soviet threat, which, at least, was potentially real.
The Soviets
had the Red Army, which had defeated Hitler and his high class war
machine. The Soviet Union had an amazing array of extremely powerful
ICBMs with single and multiple nuclear warheads, and nuclear submarines
outfitted with nuclear-armed missiles.
Somehow we
survived 46 years of this threat without going to war. But Iraq,
which all but the most stupid people on earth now know had no "weapons
of mass destruction" was such a threat that the US government
felt not only compelled to invade but also justified to lie to the
United Nations in order to attack and destroy a country that had
done nothing whatsoever to us and posed no threat whatsoever.
The same for
Afghanistan. The Taliban posed no threat whatsoever to the United
States or its European allies.
Pakistan is
a US ally; yet, Washington has murdered thousands of Pakistani civilians.
The liars in Washington and the presstitute media always claim that
murdered civilians are "al Qaeda terrorists." Every time
Washington blows up a hospital, a farmer’s home, a school, Washington
issues a report that it has just killed some al Qaeda leader. Some
of these leaders have been reported killed multiple times.
I’m
not surprised that this does not sit well with Paul Krugman. The
best thing in the Keynesians’ resume is not their economics
although it was better, perhaps, than the economics that could not
explain the Great Depression but their moral conscience.
Keynesian economists, for the most part, cared about people and
what happened to them. I knew many of the Keynesians and debated
before university and professional audiences a handful of Keynesian
Nobel prize-winners. I never thought that they were callous people.
I never expected to miss them.
To return to
Krugman: His message comes across most powerfully in the
presstitute pundits’ response to him. Michelle Malkin, whose
book on immigration I once, regrettably, reviewed favorably, misinterpreted
Krugman’s courage as cowardice and called him a "smug coward."
"Coward"
was an epithet that the presstitutes seized upon. A Washington
Post writer, Erik Wimple, declared Krugman "cowardly."
After establishing
Krugman to be a "coward," the presstitutes, who delight
in murdering "towel-heads" in six countries, escalated
their attack on Krugman. Peter Bella declared Krugman to be "vile"
and to have "no conscience."
Bella’s interpretation
of a moral conscience as its antithesis is a typical presstitute
response. It led to attacks on the New York Times for having
a "cowardly," "bewildering," "arrogant,"
"vile," contributor who "has no conscience"
as a columnist.
Jennifer Rubin
in the Washington Post declared the New York Times
for publishing Krugman’s column to be "a spiritual wasteland,"
this from a "newspaper" that many regard as a CIA asset.
In
other words. Shut Krugman up. Cancel his column. We don’t want to
hear anything from anyone that casts doubt on Washington’s murder,
maiming, and dislocation of millions of people because of a "threat"
that is a total lie. We are the exceptional nation. We are the light
unto the world. Ordinary laws do not apply to us because we are
exceptional. Laws are for underlings. We have "freedom and
democracy." Anyone who doubts us is evil and a terrorist and
a pinko-liberal-commie.
It will be
interesting to see if Krugman’s column survives his statement of
truth. It will tell us whether America has succumbed totally to
being the land of the liars, or whether a person of moral conscience
still has a voice.
September
16, 2011
Paul
Craig Roberts [send
him mail], a
former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury and former associate
editor of the Wall Street Journal, has been reporting shocking cases
of prosecutorial abuse for two decades. A new edition of his book,
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions,
co-authored with Lawrence Stratton, a documented account of how
Americans lost the protection of law, has been released by Random
House.
Copyright
© 2011 Paul
Craig Roberts
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