On
his arrival in Manila, October 18, President George Bush
compared the American
invasion of Iraq to the U.S. seizure of the Philippines
from Spain in 1898. During that war, Filipino and U.S. soldiers “liberated
the Philippines from colonial rule,” said
Bush. He failed to mention that, after the Spanish surrender,
the U.S. waged a savage, four-year
campaign against Filipino independence forces, and held
the islands as a colony until 1946.
The
following article appeared in the October 12 edition of the
Filipino newspaper, Today.
Blast from the
past
Booze time at the bar
or a quiet evening at home paying homage to the artists. So many
things American to celebrate on October 18.
Unfortunately,
the Philippines won’t be commemorating the birthdays of these
magical artists. The Philippine government prefers the music
of imperial America
-- a more suitable accompaniment to the famed multiple cartwheels
of its cheerleading.
We
can expect the garlands to be ready by October 18, when George
W. Bush arrives in the
Philippines to applaud the Arroyo administration’s Bambi-eyed
support to America’s “War on Terror.”
One more Filipino government
shamefully displaying its utter lack of historical memory.
“[W]e acted in Iraq
. . . in one of the swiftest and most humane military campaigns
in history,” said George Bush on September 7, in a speech that
likely caused his ratings to further plunge.
What a funny thing to
say after slaughtering thousands of Iraqi civilians.
Some things apparently
never change.
Gen.
Arthur MacArthur also called the Philippine-American War at
the turn of the last
century “the most legitimate and humane war ever conducted on
the face of the earth.” A war where the estimated number of Filipinos
who died as a result of America’s annexation went from 250,000
to one million.
No one knows the exact
figures, of course. Only dead Americans were counted by the US
Army then. A practice continued by the US Army in Iraq today.
Some things never do
change.
“The boys go for the
enemy as if they were chasing jack-rabbits,” said Colonel Funston
of the 20th Kansas Volunteers as his men slaughtered Filipinos
defending the fledgling Philippine republic against the American
invaders.
“I, for one, hope that
Uncle Sam will apply the chastening rod, good, hard and plenty,
and lay it on until [the Filipinos] come into the reservation
and promise to be good ‘Injuns.’”Here is an American pilot talking
about the joys of napalm while America was attempting to “liberate” Vietnam: “We
sure are pleased with those backroom boys at Dow. The original
product wasn’t so hot -- if the gooks were quick they could scrape
it off. So the boys started adding polystyrene -- now it sticks
like shit to a blanket. But then if the gooks jumped under water
it stopped burning, so they added Willie Peter [white phosphorous]
so’s to make it burn better. It’ll even burn under water now.
And just one drop is enough, it’ll keep on burning right down
to the bone so they die anyway from phosphorous poisoning.”
And
here is US Gen. John Kelly articulating his desire to improve
the plight of wretched
Iraqis during America’s invasion of Iraq in April:
“They
stand, they fight, sometimes they run when we engage them.
But often they run into
our machine guns and we shoot them down like the morons they
are . . . They appear willing to die. We are trying our best
to help them out in that endeavor.”
By
such uncanny love does America inherit the world’s affections.
In 1899 the American
Anti-Imperialist League crafted a platform that sought
to steer the United States away from its desire to annex the
Philippines. The manifesto, which opposed the annexation of
the Philippines because it ran counter to America’s traditions,
should be required reading today for all:
“We insist that the
subjugation of any people is ‘criminal aggression’ and open disloyalty
to the distinctive principles of our government . . . We demand
the immediate cessation of the war . . . We propose to contribute
to the defeat of any person or party that stands for the forcible
subjugation of any people. We shall oppose for reelection all
who in the White House or in Congress betray American liberty
in pursuit of un-American ends . . . We hold with Abraham Lincoln,
that “no man is good enough to govern another man without that
other’s consent. When the white man governs himself, that is
self-government, but when he governs himself and also governs
another man, that is more than self-government -- that is despotism.”’
Funny
that Emperor Bush is arriving in the Philippines on October
18 -- the exact same
day 104 years ago that the League’s Platform was created.