Maybe
you thought Republicans were �strong on defense.� Perhaps you had
the impression that Dick Cheney-admirers consider terrorists to
be unmitigated, unredeemable, unappeasable evil in the flesh.
Then came Joe Stack - the anti-tax, anti-government software engineer
who plane-bombed an IRS building in Texas last week killing two
workers. The kind of guy Republican Congressman Steve King told
a Conservative Political Action Conference audience he could �empathize�
with. The man who many conservatives are lauding as a �hero.�
If you didn�t want to believe it before, believe it now. When conservatives
talk about �terrorists� what they really mean are Arabs, Muslims
or any other brown or dark-skinned person who, like Joe, thinks
that �violence is the only way.� In fact, when Afghanis and Iraqis
take up arms to fight a military invasion, we call them �terrorists�
even when �they� attack military targets!
To be fair, it�s not easy asking ridiculous questions like: why do they hate us? when
�they� are us. Or, more specifically, a white American with no obvious
ties to �Islamo-fascism� a la John Walker Lindh.
But frankly, we all knew that. At least since W �misspoke� and referred
to the so-called Global War on Terror as a �crusade.�
While it may not be too surprising that there�s a �debate� in the
media over whether Joe the Engineer is a terrorist or not, it�s
still an Orwellian wonder to behold.
It�s interesting to note that while the kamikaze mission in Texas
was the top news story the day it happened, and the next day - according
to the Project for Excellence in Journalism (PEJ), publishers of
a weekly breakdown of national news coverage - it was only the fifth-biggest
story of the week; behind the economy, the Winter Olympics, Afghanistan
and the 2010 elections, which are still almost a year away.
Remember the near-miss Northwest Airlines terror plot foiled just
before Christmas? No one was debating whether to call it terrorism
and it was the top story for the entire week, getting almost 20
percent more news hole than Joe-sama bin Stack, even though Joe
has far more sympathizers in the U.S. than al Qaeda could ever hope
to have. Hmmmm.
Near-miss
terrorism had the President giving addresses, calling for national
security reviews, reportedly losing his famous cool with cabinet
members, ordering tighter airport security measures, full body scanners,
the whole shebang. The right frothed about Mirandizing terrorists
because...well, ya know, the whole �strong on defense� bit.
Then Joe flies onto the radar screen and gives us a textbook case
of terrorism - killing civilians to advance a political point -
and folks are doing mental gymnastics over whether or not Joe should
be called a terrorist.
I�ll give Tea Party supporter and editor of The
Humble Libertarian magazine,
Wesley Messamore, credit though. Messamore at least has the honesty
to call Joe by his name:
�Joe Stack was a terrorist. Period...it�s hard for me not to feel
like the only fervent antitax activist out there who is unequivocally
opposed to Stack�s domestic terrorism,� he wrote
this week in the Christian Science Monitor.
�In 2010, a terrorist is not someone who targets civilians to accomplish
political goals; a terrorist is a Muslim who targets civilians to
accomplish political goals. This is an intrinsically myopic view
of the world. Muslims are not the only terrorists. When my father
was my age, the word �terrorist� was associated with Irish Christians.
When my great-grandfather was my age, it was associated with Jewish
anarchists. Only today is terror primarily associated with Islam.
At a time like this, if every disgruntled American did what Stack
did, our great country would be reduced to ashes.�
Well, yeah, Wes. That�s what the �moonbats� on the left have been
saying for years. And yet the warm-and-fuzzy peaceniks are na�ve?!
Welcome to the real party.
I�m
not gonna lie and I wasn�t alone. My initial reaction to the news
was: yet another typical right wing extremist snapped.
But if you read
the rant he left behind, you�ll find a riff on capitalism in there:
�The capitalist creed: From each according to his gullibility, to
each according to his greed.�
Pretty witty. Someone on the left should have thought of that first.
And when have you ever heard anyone on the right say anything bad
about capitalism, even if it�s an obvious truism? I�m not saying
Stack is the new Che Guevera, I�m just sayin�.
The
biggest irony, of course, has been left/right out of the discussion;
namely that Joe Stack was a software engineer! For a computer guy
to be that pissed at the IRS highlights a fundamental blind spot
in popular anti-government politics, especially the kind Reaganites
like to dabble in.
I hate to rain on a good Tea Party but it was Big Government that
created the internet. And no, I�m not talking about Al Gore.
What was sold to the public as the �information superhighway� began
as way for Defense Department scientists to better communicate with
one another. The internet
has its technological roots in the Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency (DARPA) which funded all the initial R & D. And just
like many other taxpayer-funded R & D projects, when Big Bad
Government technology is �ready for market,� it gets handed over
to private industry so they can profit from it. Public subsidy.
Private profit. That�s the system we have. Ever heard of the Energy
Department or the National Institute of Health�s offices of �technology
transfers?�
The
DOE
boasts: �Estimates are that fully half the growth in the American
economy in the last 50 years was due to (tax-payer) funding of scientific
and technological innovation. Research investments by the Department
of Energy have yielded a wealth of dividends, including new intellectual
capital, significant technological innovations, medical and health
advances, enhanced economic competitiveness, and improved quality
of life for the American people.�
If Rep. King can empathize with Joe Stack, it shouldn�t be hard
for him to empathize with the �terrorism� of foreign fighters mad
as hell with U.S. foreign policy and its military application, which,
needless to say, is much more severe than tax liens and cannot be
fixed by voting out U.S. policy-makers.
And
if you can�t appreciate the irony of a computer guy biting the hand
that Fed his profession, well, then you�re probably a closet tea
bagger oblivious to the long history of Uncle Sam transferring tax-payer
dollars into the hands of private industry.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial
Board member Nathaniel Turner is a pseudonym for a Gen
X writer, newspaper editor and activist. He is a news analyst
who offers commentaries on contemporary issues facing the progressive
movements in the USA Click here to
contact brother Turner. |