In Other Words
What Bush Really Said In State Of The Union
Speech By Jacob G. Hornberger Future Of Freedom
Foundation 2-1-3
- ... In other words, what I am telling you, my fellow
Americans, is that the state of the Union is fine. And it will be made
even better with our upcoming invasion of Iraq.
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- Keep your mind focused ... on Saddam Hussein. Do not
permit it to stray toward the thousands of Iraqi people, including
ordinary Iraqi soldiers, whom we must unfortunately kill in order to
disarm Saddam. Don't think about them. Think only about how wonderful
and glorious it will be to see Saddam dead or put into the dock at an
international war-crimes tribunal or paraded through the streets. Think
about how good you felt when we arrested Manuel Noriega in our invasion
of Panama, thereby helping to stem the tide of drugs into
America.
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- This war is about liberation. Yes, it's true that the
thousands of Iraqis we must kill in order to finally get to Saddam will
not experience the joys of that liberation. They will be dead. But think
about the Iraqis who will live to experience them. Even those who are
maimed, blinded, and paralyzed will sing our praises, because, as
everyone knows, it's better to be maimed, blind, and paralyzed and
living in freedom under a U.S. army general than it is to be whole and
living in tyranny under a totalitarian dictator.
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- But just don't think about the deaths and injuries
that we must inflict on the Iraqi people in order to disarm Saddam. Keep
your mind focused only on him, and you'll do fine.
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- After all, think about how you have handled our
economic blockade against Iraq, which has now been in effect for more
than 10 years, a blockade that has contributed to the deaths of an
estimated 500,000 to 1,000,000 Iraqi children, who also unfortunately
will be unable to experience the joys of our war of liberation.
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- Have those deaths bothered you? Probably not. And the
reason they haven't is that you haven't thought about them. Right?
You've just kept your mind focused on how evil Saddam Hussein is and on
the importance of a regime change in Iraq. Right? Well, it's important
that you do the same thing once we begin our invasion.
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- Much has been said about the three high UN officials
who resigned their posts because of the deaths of the Iraqi children
that our blockade helped to cause. Pay them no mind. Once the UN voted
to establish that blockade, those officials had no moral right to resign
their positions just because they were suffering a crisis of conscience.
That's not what loyalty and patriotism are all about.
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- After all, did you see Janet Reno resign her post
after we gassed our own people at Waco, including the Branch Davidian
children? Of course not. Because, unlike those UN officials who resigned
their positions because of a crisis of conscience, Reno, a true
American, loyally and patriotically stayed at her post.
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- Anyway, it's not really our blockade that has killed
those children. It's Saddam Hussein who has killed them. Because he
could have used the money from our socialist "oil for food program" to
feed the children. Instead, he gave higher priority to the needs of
government officials, including the Iraqi military. And his callousness
really shocked us.
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- That's not something we would have done. Never mind
that we're giving priority to our government officials and the U.S.
military to receive our limited supplies of smallpox vaccine. That's
different.
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- The Pope has said that our invasion of Iraq is wrong
because it will be an unprovoked attack on another nation. Pay him no
mind. He might be an expert in moral and theological matters but he is
no expert when it comes to foreign policy.
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- We have a moral right to invade Iraq because Saddam
has violated rules, regulations, and resolutions of the United Nations.
As everyone knows, he has shown utter contempt for the UN. The problem,
however, is that the UN refuses to enforce its own resolutions. The UN
has no backbone. Therefore, we must ignore the spineless UN cowards in
order to punish Saddam for having contempt for the United
Nations.
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- We also have a moral right to invade Iraq because
Saddam might use biological and chemical weapons and nuclear weapons
against the United States at some time in the future. After all, he's an
evil man. And the fact that he has the weapons means that he might use
them against us, especially since he might be angry that our blockade
has contributed to the deaths of so many Iraqi children over the past 10
years.
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- Don't let the fact that Saddam hasn't used those
weapons against us for more than 10 years influence you. All that means
is that he's been lulling us into a false sense of security. Don't
forget: he is an evil and cunning man.
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- And we know that Saddam is lying when he denies having
those biological and chemical weapons because when my father was serving
as our vice president his regime gave them to him. No, my father is not
evil for delivering biological and chemical weapons to an evil man. My
father is good. It was Saddam and his evil and seductive ways that
induced my father to deliver those evil weapons to him. That's also why
my father's regime knowingly and intentionally helped Saddam to use the
biological and chemical weapons we gave him against the Iranian people.
My father and his regime were duped by that evil man.
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- One more point about the Pope's declaration that this
will be an unjust war. You don't need to worry about his pronouncement,
especially if you're Catholic, because it will be the U.S. government,
not you, that will be waging the war and therefore, from a moral
standpoint, you're off the hook. That's also why the German people who
loyally and patriotically supported their government's war efforts in
World War II could not be held morally accountable for what their
government did. After all, what is patriotism if it's not loyally
supporting one's government and its troops, especially in time of
war?
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- Don't think even for a moment that God will hold you
morally accountable for the deaths of those Iraqi people. He won't. For
one thing, it's war. And remember, in war, there are no laws against
murder. People die in war. Thus, as long as it's war, how can God hold
the killings to be wrongful? Right?
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- Everyone, including God, knows that war is hell and
that in war anything goes. That's why we had every right in the world to
firebomb the people of Dresden and other German cities and to drop
nuclear bombs on the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki for what their
government was doing. It's also why our friend and ally, the Soviet
Union (which was the victim of a war of aggression by Nazi Germany, as
the Nuremberg War Crimes Tribunal's indictment reflected), had the right
to rape thousands of German women near the end of World War II. It's why
we have the right to torture prisoners in our "war on terrorism." War is
hell, and in war anything goes, and God knows it.
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- And if for whatever reason you do start to reflect on
the deaths of all those Iraqi people, just keep thinking how good and
compassionate we Americans are. In fact, today I'm announcing a welfare
packet for people in Africa who are suffering from AIDS. Billions of
dollars in U.S. taxpayer monies will be going to help them. That proves
that we are a good and compassionate people. You think about that when
the invasion of Iraq begins ... and also on April 15 when you help to
fund our new, compassionate international AIDS welfare program with your
donations to the IRS. If anyone begins to have a crisis of conscience
over all the Iraqis we must kill to disarm Saddam, our AIDS welfare
packet should help to salve and medicate that pain.
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- We have had many months of good, spirited debate in
this nation about the wisdom of going to war against Iraq. That's what
democracy is all about. But keep in mind what every one of you has been
taught from the first grade on up in our public schools: in our country,
since I'm the commander in chief, I get to make the final decision on
whether to send our nation into war; and once the shooting starts, it's
your solemn duty, as a good citizen, to loyally and patriotically
support your commander in chief and our troops.
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- And make no mistake about it: we always have the
welfare of the troops foremost in our minds when we send them to fight
and die in these foreign adventures. That's also why our V.A. hospitals
are top-notch. In fact, that's our goal with nationalized health care:
to bring the quality of V.A. hospitals to all of you. It's also why we
conducted biological, chemical, and radiation experiments on
unsuspecting U.S. servicemen - so we could garner information to protect
other U.S. servicemen. It's why we sent hundreds of thousands of
American GIs to die in Southeast Asia - to protect them from the threat
of communism. It's also why we still have 37,000 sacrificial "trip-wire"
troops in Korea - to protect them from communism. It's also why we
sacrificed American GIs in Somalia - in order to feed the Somali people,
because Americans are good.
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- I know - all this is complicated and you might have
trouble understanding it. Just leave it to us here in Washington. We're
the experts. That's why we're here and you're there.
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- Keep in mind also what the secretary of state in my
father's regime, James Baker, pointed out on the eve of the Gulf War:
that war against Iraq is also about jobs. Think about all the jobs we're
creating in the U.S. military-industrial complex, a complex that now
outranks even some of those in Latin America in terms of national power
and influence.
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- Yes, I know, there are those who say that Ronald
Reagan brought down the Soviet Union by making it spend its way into
bankruptcy. But every economist in the world will tell you that that
economic principle applies only to evil empires, not to good ones. And
we're a good one.
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- So once I order the invasion, the debating must come
to a stop, and as a good citizen you must come on board and support our
efforts. Just sit there on your couch in front of your television set,
watch us dazzle you with our unbelievably fantastic new weaponry that
you have paid for with your payments to the IRS, and sing along with us:
"Well, I'm proud to be an American where at least I know I'm
free."
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- God bless America ... and may He quickly make room for
those thousands of Iraqi people who will soon be dispatched into His
care. Just don't think about them.
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- Mr. Hornberger is founder and president of The Future
of Freedom Foundation
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- � 2001, 2002 The Future of Freedom Foundation. All
rights
reserved.
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The Mulindwas
communication group "With Yoweri Museveni, Uganda is in
anarchy"
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