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SHRED Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jul-12-06 10:58 PM
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Militarism and the Corporate Welfare State
Militarism and the Corporate Welfare State

By Charles Sullivan

07/11/06 "Information Clearing House" -- -- Right wing politicos and their conservative constituents are always bemoaning big government. Yet wealthy people of all political stripes constantly use big government to their own benefit. The rich widely assume, falsely, I think, that what is good for them is good for the country. By extension they also assume that what is good for the corporations is good for the people. But that has never been the case. No one should be allowed to make a living on the misery of others.

The latter seems odd, given that business people are always harping about getting the government out of our (their) lives; all the while they are using government to obtain no bid contracts, to write legislation in the corporate interest, stocking the judiciary with pro-corporate judges, redrawing political districts and using the military to invade and occupy sovereign nations in order to privatize them. Iraq provides a compelling case study.

Of course, what businessmen really mean by getting government off our backs is preventing government from regulating commerce, as if there were some connection between capital and democracy, democracy and freedom. In corporate speak democracy and free trade has nothing to do with human beings and their freedoms. What Bush and his kind are really talking about is absolute corporate rule and continued Plutocracy.

According to author Antonia Juhasz, “Prior to the first Gulf War in 1991 and even after eight years of war with Iran, Iraq was ranked 15 out of 130 countries on the 1990 United Nations Human Development Index. Before the first Bush invasion, Iraq had the highest percentage of college-educated citizens in the Middle East and above average overall literacy rates. According to the World Health Organization, prior to 1991 health care reached approximately 97 percent of the urban population and 78 percent of rural residents, while the infant mortality rate was well below average for developing countries. “


... http://informationclearinghouse.info/article13953.htm
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OneBlueSky Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-13-06 01:14 AM
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1. my presidential candidate will be the one who says . . .
"We must end corporate control of the Congress -- and I will not accept any corporate contributions to my campaign" . . .
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