-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the March 20, 2003
issue of Workers World newspaper
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MUMIA FROM DEATH ROW--BUSH TO WORLD: 'DROP DEAD'

["Why of course the people don't want war... But after all it is the 
leaders of the country who determine the policy, and it's always a 
simple matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy or a 
fascist dictatorship... Voice or no voice, the people can always be 
brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do 
is tell them they're being attacked, and denounce the pacifists for lack 
of patriotism and exposing the country to danger."

-- Hermann Goering
(Gestapo/Nazi leader), testimony
to Nuremberg war crimes trial, 1946]

The world has witnessed the most massive anti-war demonstrations in 
global history, and the Bush administration proposes to treat them as 
non-events. Incredible!

This administration has, from its earliest days, acted with barely 
concealed contempt for the wishes of the world. The evisceration of the
Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty was one measure.
The rejection of the International Criminal Court. The insults against 
German leaders who don't bow sufficiently when Americans stride in the 
neighborhood. The rampant Francophobia. The negation of the will of the 
United Nations.

These are but variant strains of an underlying theme: The United States, 
the Great, Mighty bastion of democracy, could care less what the 
majority of the world wants, not to mention what the majority of 
Americans want. War is dictated by the military-industrial-complex, and--
so be it.

When a million people turn out in the capital of the country of 
America's "closest ally" to oppose his policies, and the U.S. still 
loosens the reins of the mouth-foaming dogs of war, then "ally" is just 
a synonym for "servant," for surely, it cannot mean anything remotely 
like "friend." The beleaguered British prime minister, Tony Blair, is 
facing an intraparty battle that threatens to topple its hold on power. 
What a queer duck this "democracy" is! It allows those in power to 
virtually ignore what the majority of the people (that they supposedly 
"represent") wants! Yet, Herr Bush, in truest dictatorial fashion, gives 
the nod to the army, and virtually promises to ignore whatever the UN 
does--unless they genuflect before His Imperial Majesty, King George II
(or is it III?).

The Turkish Parliament boldly votes against the U.S. Empire's wishes to 
use its land as a planning table for massacre and war, and the Americans 
insist that they vote again! (Again--isn't this kind of, well, anti-
democratic?)

"The Empire Strikes--First!" and threatens to rip the world in half, 
unless all adore the Empire-- New Babylon--and surrender before her all 
that she wishes.

We are all at the very brink of war, one which will not soon end. Truth 
be told, we are on the precipice of World War, if just a few small 
things go disastrously wrong.

Hundreds of cities, on all six continents, from Kuala Lumpur to 
Ramallah, from Seoul to Seattle, from London to Leningrad, and beyond, 
the message went forth in a din that was deafening in its simplicity: 
"NO WAR!" But the White House is soundproof (except for the sound of 
coins jangling in the pockets of arms merchants or defense lobbyists) 
and the president of the United States is deaf. The government that 
Lincoln once claimed, "of the people, by the people, and for the 
people," won't hear the people--because they aren't saying what they 
want to hear.

What will it take?

What is clear is that it will take more than what has happened thus far.

Demonstrations are powerful indicators of popular consciousness, but is 
it enough when the State is profoundly undemocratic, and driven by other 
forces?

The answer may lie in that little-used social resource of union power. 
The recent statement of the AFL-CIO (a federation of trade unions in the 
U.S., Canada, Mexico, Panama and U.S. territories) against the war, 
while quite remarkable, was all but dismissed by the Bush Regime. What 
would happen, however, if a general strike were called among all member 
unions, against this imminent war?

It may take such measures to begin to put the dogs of war back in their 
cages, before, as Dr. Nelson Mandela suggested, a modern-day "holocaust" 
is unleashed upon the world.

- END -

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