NOTE:  The writer of this wonder screed could use a good atlas, and I don't 
agree with him about who is responsible for 911 (I think maybe it was Cheney 
and/or the Mossad), but otherwise IMHO his POV is RIGHT ON.
Romi/Blue

The  View from Abroad
The World is not Billy Bob's Rib Pit

By Fred Reed

March 16,  2013 "Information  Clearing House"-  The United States is the most 
hated country in the  world, followed closely by Israel, and then by nobody. 
Why? Why  not Ecuador? China? Russia? East Timor? The hostility puzzles  many 
Americans, who genuinely believe their country to be a  force for good, a 
pillar of democracy, a defender of human  rights.
To the  rest of the world, none of this is even close.
If you  have lived abroad, as so very few Americans have, the  explanation for 
the hatred is obvious: Meddling. Relentless,  prideful, uncomprehending 
meddling, frequently military, often  with horrendous death tolls. Americans, 
adroitly managed by a  controlled press, historically illiterate, incurious,  
decreasingly educated, either have never heard of the American  behavior that 
angers others, or believe it to have been inspired  by virtuous motives. Nobody 
else thinks so. Add to unfamiliarity  with the wider world the constantly 
inculcated assertion that  America is the greatest, most wonderful nation ever 
to exist, a  light to the world, a shining city on a hill, and you get a  
dangerously delusional state. Especially now. In the past,  American economic 
and military supremacy were such that the US  didn’t have to care what others 
thought. The times, they are  a-changing.
It might  be wise to compare briefly the view through American and foreign  
eyes. Consider Iraq. To most of the world, the war on Iraq was  brutal, 
unprovoked, and murderous. More than a few, looking at  the ruins of Fallujah, 
thought of Guernica—of which few in the  States have ever heard. 
Many  Americans do not believe that we destroyed Iraq for oil, empire,  and the 
Israel lobby, as was in fact the case. No. We wanted to  topple an evil 
dictator and dispense the precious gift of  democracy. It was a question of 
goodness. Many apparently still  believe that Iraq had something to do with the 
attacks on New  York. Again, controlled press, poor schooling, little curiosity.
Similarly,  Americans tend to see the war on Afghanistan as having to do  with 
ending Terror or sprouting democracy—not as the Great Game  (“Hanh?”) redux, or 
the quest for the TAPI pipeline (“Say whuh?”)  or Caspian hydrocarbons. 
(“Caspian? You mean the Friendly  Ghost?”) To most of the world, Afghanistan is 
just another sorry  spectacle of American fighter-bombers killing peasants, of  
gutted children and drone attacks on half-identified targets.  This, the 
merciless use of overwhelming firepower against  lightly armed campesinos, is 
what the world sees, over  and over. Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Yemen, Somalia, 
Pakistan. It  isn’t pretty.
I live in  Mexico. In countless towns, probably in every city of any size,  you 
see streets named Niños Heroes, Heroic Children. In  Guadalajara there is a 
traffic circle with an imposing monument  to them. These things commemorate the 
children who tried to  fight the American soldiers invading Mexico City. In 
that  (purely acquisitive) war Mexico lost half its territory. Yet how  many 
gringos know that it ever happened, or when, or for that  matter have ever 
heard of the bombardment of Veracruz or  Pershing’s incursion? 
Americans  who have some grasp of history sometimes say of the  
Mexican-American War that Mexicans should “get over it.” Some  might tell the 
Jews to get over the Holocaust, or Americans to  get over 9/11. It is much 
easier to tell people to get over what  you have done to them than to get over 
things they have done to  you.
Then there  is the War on Drugs. Americans believe this to be a campaign   
against Evil—best conducted, of course, in other people’s  countries. 
There are  other views. Thoughtful Mexicans (all I know, but I haven’t  taken a 
poll) do not see why drugs are Mexico’s problem. If  gringos don’t want drugs, 
why do they buy them? Why don’t they  solve their own problems? It is no secret 
internationally that  American students in high school and universities use 
drugs. Why  don’t the Americans put their college kids in jail? And, they  say, 
probably correctly, that Washington, by sponsoring the  elimination of big drug 
lords, caused the current fighting among  littler lords to control the trade, 
thus creating carnage.  Predictably, the flow of drugs northward was not 
affected.
Truculent  patriots at Billy Bob’s Rib Pit know none of this. The  combination 
of clueless ignorance and a sort of Walmart-parking-lot  arrogance make 
mysterious to them much behavior of other  countries. Consider their view of 
Iran, an evil Arab country,  somewhere, that wants the Bomb so it can blow up 
Israel and New  York. No explanation occurs to them for Iran’s hostility to the 
 US, which wants regime change so Iranians can be democratic and  have 
freedoms. Ask Billy Bobbers whether they have even heard  of, much less been 
in, major Iranian cities like Tehran,  Sulawesi, Sidon, or Tbilisi. No. Yet 
they are sure the  inhabitants are dangerous and un-American.
Iranians  may perhaps see things differently. They know that in 1953 the  
democratically electeed prime minister Mohammed Mossadeg (“Mossy  what?” they 
ask in the Rib Pit.) was overthrown by the CIA  leaving the Shah (“Is that, 
like, a person?”), a routinely  ghastly dictator, in control. This had much to 
do with the  occupation of the US embassy in 1979, which was sold in the US  as 
evidence of the badness of Iranians. 
Later, in  1988, the US Navy, in the form of the USS Vincennes, shot down  an 
Iranian airliner and killed everyone aboard. Americans  shrugged it off: Such 
things were doubtless necessary to stop  terrorism. But imagine the outrage if 
the Iranian navy shot down  a US airliner.
Nobody  beyond the borders buys our song about spreading freedom and  human 
rights.  America has supported countless sordid dictators  rulling by army and 
torture chamber (the Saudis being a current  example). We have put many 
dictators on their thrones, such as  Pniochet (“That little wooden guy, his 
nose got long when he  told a lie, right?”) in Chile. (“Isn’t that Texmex soup 
with  beans in it?”) Others notice that the only country that openly  and 
proudly tortures prisoners is…us.
Always,  the underlying problem is meddling. Bin Laden’s guys didn’t  attack 
New York because it was a slow morning and they couldn’t  think of anything 
else to do. They were furious at US meddling  in Moslem lands. You may think, 
and I may think, that Islam is a  primitive faith not well adapted to the 
modern world. Fine. I  may think that hornets do not have an ideal social 
organization.  But I know better than to poke their nest.
This is  why they hate us—meddling, bombing, invading, droning, telling  them 
how to run their countries. No, George, it is not because  of our freedoms.
Fred's  Biography - As He Tells It - Fred, a keyboard mercenary with a  
disorganized past, has worked on staff for Army Times, The  Washingtonian, 
Soldier of Fortune, Federal Computer Week, and  The Washington Times. His 
website - www.fredoneverything.net

http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article34328.htm?utm_source=ICH%3A+Paul+Craig+Roberts%3A+When+Truth+Is+Suppressed+Countries+Die&utm_campaign=FIRST&utm_medium=email#idc-cover


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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