! Wake-up  World  Wake-up !
~ It's Time to Rise and Shine ~


We as spiritual beings or souls come to earth in order to experience the human condition. This includes the good and the bad scenarios of this world. Our world is a duality planet and no amount of love or grace will eliminate evil or nastiness. We will return again and again until we have pierced the illusions of this density. The purpose of human life is to awaken to universal truth. This also means that we must awaken to the lies and deceit mankind is subjected to. To pierce the third density illusion is a must in order to remove ourselves from the wheel of human existences. Love is important but knowledge is the key!




Fear and Learning in America 
By Robert Fisk

This article comes courtesy of the Independent. The original is at:
http://argument.independent.co.uk/commentators/story.jsp?story=28 5777

[Editor's Note: this article makes a strong case that there is considerably 
more dissent in America than appearances indicate. This is an argument, it 
will be recalled, that was put forth in my most recent diatribe, America 
Through the Looking Glass. Mr. Fisk has just returned from a U.S. speaking 
tour with some wonderfully encouraging observations.]

Robert Fisk: Fear and learning in America As an outspoken critic of US 
policy in the Middle East, Fisk expected a hostile reception when he paid 
his first visit to the American Midwest since 11 September. He couldn't have 
been more mistaken 
17 April 2002

Osama bin Laden once told me that Americans did not understand the Middle 
East. Last week, in a little shuttle bus shouldering its way through 
curtains of rain across the Iowa prairies, I opened my copy of the Des 
Moines Register and realised that he might be right. "BIG HOG LOTS CALLED 
GREATER THREAT THAN BIN LADEN," announced the headline. Iowa's 15 million 
massive pigs, it seems, produce so much manure that the state waterways are 
polluted. "Large-scale hog producers are a greater threat to the United 
States and US democracy than Osama bin Laden and his terrorist network, says 
Robert F Kennedy Junior, president of...
a New York environment group... 'We've watched communities and American 
values shattered by these bullies,' Kennedy said..." 

I took out my pocket calculator and did a little maths. Cedar Rapids, I 
reckoned, was 7,000 miles from Afghanistan. Another planet, more like. I've 
been travelling to the United States for years, lecturing at Princeton or 
Harvard or Brown University, Rhode Island, or San Francisco, or Madison, 
Wisconsin. God knows why. I refuse all payment and take just a 
business-class round trip from Beirut because I can't take 14 hours of 
screaming babies in each direction. American college students are tough as 
nails and bored as cabbages, and in some cities - Washington is top of the 
list - I might as well talk in Amharic. If you don't use phrases like "peace 
process", "back on track" or "Israel under siege", there's a kind of 
computerised blackout on the faces of the audience. Total Disk Failure. Why 
should my latest bout of Americana have been any different?

Sure, there were the usual oddballs. There was the old black guy whose first 
"question" on the Middle East in a Chicago University lecture theatre was a 
long and proud announcement that he hadn't paid taxes to the IRS since 1948 
- a claim so wonderful that I forbore the usual threat to close down on him. 
There were the World Trade Centre conspiracists who insisted that the US 
government had planted explosives in the twin towers. 

There was the silver-haired lady who wanted to know why God couldn't be made 
to resolve the hatred between Israelis and Palestinians. And a Native 
American Indian in Los Angeles who ranted on about a Jewish plot to deprive 
his people of their land. A bespectacled man with long white hair in a 
ponytail shut him up before declaring that the Israeli-Palestinian war was 
identical to the American-Mexican war that deprived his own people of... 
well, of Los Angeles. I began to calculate the distance between LA and 
Jenin. A galaxy perhaps.

And there were the little tell-tale stories that showed just how biased and 
gutless the American press has become in the face of America's Israeli lobby 
groups. "I wrote a report for a major paper about the Palestinian exodus of 
1948," a Jewish woman told me as we drove through the smog of downtown LA. 
"And of course, I mentioned the massacre of Palestinians at Deir Yassin by 
the Stern Gang and other Jewish groups - the massacre that prompted 750,000 
Arabs to flee their homes. 

Then I look for my story in the paper and what do I find? The word 'alleged' 
has been inserted before the word 'massacre'. I called the paper's ombudsman 
and told him the massacre at Deir Yassin was a historical fact. Can you 
guess his reply? He said that the editor had written the word 'alleged' 
before 'massacre' because that way he thought he'd avoid lots of critical 
letters."

By chance, this was the theme of my talks and lectures: the cowardly, idle, 
spineless way in which American journalists are lobotomising their stories 
from the Middle East, how the "occupied territories" have become "disputed 
territories" in their reports, how Jewish "settlements" have been 
transformed into Jewish "neighbourhoods", how Arab militants are 
"terrorists" but Israeli militants only "fanatics" or "extremists", how 
Ariel Sharon - the man held "personally responsible" by Israel's own 
commissioner's inquiry for the 1982 Sabra and Chatila massacre of 1,700 
Palestinians - could be described in a report in The New York Times as 
having the instincts of "a warrior". 

How the execution of surviving Palestinian fighters was so often called 
"mopping up". How civilians killed by Israeli soldiers were always "caught 
in the crossfire". I demanded to know of my audiences - and I expected the 
usual American indignation when I did - how US citizens could accept the 
infantile "dead or alive", "with us or against us", axis-of-evil policies of 
their President.

And for the first time in more than a decade of lecturing in the United 
States, I was shocked. Not by the passivity of Americans - the 
all-accepting, patriotic notion that the President knows best - nor by the 
dangerous self-absorption of the United States since 11 September and the 
constant, all-consuming fear of criticising Israel. What shocked me was the 
extraordinary new American refusal to go along with the official line, the 
growing, angry awareness among Americans that they were being lied to and 
deceived. 

t some of my talks, 60 per cent of the audiences were over 40. In some 
cases, perhaps 80 per cent were Americans with no ethnic or religious roots 
in the Middle East - "American Americans", as I cruelly referred to them on 
one occasion, "white Americans", as a Palestinian student called them more 
truculently. For the first time, it wasn't my lectures they objected to, but 
the lectures they received from their President and the lectures they read 
in their press about Israel's "war on terror" and the need always, 
uncritically, to support everything that America's little Middle Eastern 
ally says and does.

There was, for example, the crinkly-faced, ex-naval officer who approached 
me after a talk at a United Methodist church in the San Diego suburb of 
Encinitas. "Sir, I was an officer on the aircraft carrier John F Kennedy 
during the 1973 Middle East war," he began. (I checked him out later and he 
was, as my host remarked, "for real".) "We were stationed off Gibraltar and 
our job was to refuel the fighter jets we were sending to Israel after their 
air force was shot to bits by the Arabs. 

Our planes would land with their USAF and Marine markings partly stripped 
off and the Star of David already painted on the side. Does anyone know why 
we gave all those planes to the Israelis just like that? When I see on 
television our planes and our tanks used to attack Palestinians, I can 
understand why people hate Americans."

In the United States, I'm used to lecturing in half-empty lecture halls. 
Three years ago, I managed to fill a Washington auditorium seating 600 with 
just 32 Americans. But in Chicago and Iowa and Los Angeles this month, they 
came in their hundreds - almost 900 at one venue at the University of 
Southern California - and they sat in the aisles and corridors and outside 
the doors. It wasn't because Lord Fisk was in town. 

Maybe the title of my talk - "September 11: ask who did it, but for heaven's 
sake don't ask why" - was provocative. But for the most part they came, as 
the question-and-answer sessions quickly revealed, because they were tired 
of being suckered by the television news networks and the right-wing 
punditocracy.

Never before have I been asked by Americans: "How can we make our press 
report the Middle East fairly?" or - much more disturbingly - "How can we 
make our government reflect our views?" The questions are a trap, of course. 
Brits have been shoving advice at the United States ever since we lost the 
War of Independence, and I wasn't going to join their number. But the fact 
that these questions could be asked - usually by middle-aged Americans with 
no family origins in the Middle East - suggested a profound change in a 
hitherto docile population.

Towards the end of each talk, I apologised for the remarks I was about to 
make. I told audiences that the world did not change on 11 September, that 
the Lebanese and Palestinians had lost 17,500 dead during Israel's 1982 
invasion - more than five times the death toll of the international crimes 
against humanity of 11 September - but the world did not change 20 yearsago. 
There were no candles lit then, no memorial services. 

And each time I said this, there was a nodding of heads - grey-haired and 
balding as well as young - across the room. The smallest irreverent joke 
about President Bush was often met with hoots of laughter. I asked one of my 
hosts why this happened, why the audience accepted this from a Briton. 
"Because we don't think Bush won the election," she replied.

Of course, it's easy to be fooled. The first local radio shows illustrated 
all too well how the Middle East discourse is handled in America. When 
Gayane Torosyan opened WSUI/KSUI for questions in Iowa City, a caller named 
"Michael" - a leader of the local Jewish community, I later learnt, though 
he did not say this on air - insisted that after the Camp David talks in 
2000, Yasser Arafat had turned to "terrorism" despite being offered a 
Palestinian state with a capital in Jerusalem and 96 per cent of the West 
Bank and Gaza. Slowly and deliberately, I had to deconstruct this nonsense. 
Jerusalem was to have remained the "eternal and unified capital of Israel", 
according to Camp David.

Arafat would only have got what Madeleine Albright called "a sort of 
sovereignty" over the Haram al-Sharif mosque area and some Arab streets, 
while the Palestinian parliament would have been below the city's eastern 
walls at Abu Dis. With the vastly extended and illegal Jerusalem 
municipality boundaries deep into the West Bank, Jewish settlements like 
Maale Adumim were not up for negotiation; nor were several other 
settlements. Nor was the 10-mile Israeli military buffer zone around the 
West Bank, nor the settlers' roads, which would razor through the 
Palestinian "state". Arafat was offered about 46 per cent of the 22 per cent 
of Palestine that was left. I could imagine the audience of WSUI/KSUI 
falling slowly from their seats in boredom.

Yet back at my folksy, wooden-walled hotel, the proprietor and his wife - P 
Force volunteers in the Kennedy era - had listened to every word. "We know 
what is going on," he said. "I was a naval officer in the Gulf back in the 
Sixties and we only had few ships there then. In those days, the Shah of 
Iran was our policeman. Now we've got all those ships in there and our 
soldiers in the Arab countries and we seem to dominate the place." Osama bin 
Laden, I said to myself, couldn't put it better.

How odd, I reflected, that American newspapers can scarcely say even this. 
The Daily Iowan - there are no fewer than four dailies in Iowa City, press 
freedom being represented by the number of newspapers rather than their 
depth of coverage - had none of my hotel landlord's forthrightness. "The 
situation in the Middle East is one that many Americans do not adequately 
understand," it miserably lamented, "nor can they be reasonably articulate 
about it." This rubbish - that Americans were too dumb to comprehend the 
Middle East bloodbath and should therefore keep their mouths shut - was a 
pervasive theme in editorials. Even more instructive were the reports of my 
own lectures.

The headline, "Fisk: Who really are the terrorists?" in the Daily Iowan last 
week at least caught the gist of my message, and included my own examples of 
American press bias in the Middle East, although it failed on the facts, 
wrongly reporting that it was the United Nations (rather than the far more 
persuasive Israeli Kahan Commission) which concluded that Sharon was 
"personally responsible" for the Sabra and Chatila massacre. The Des Moines 
Register's account of one of my talks was intriguing.

It concentrated on my interviews with Osama bin Laden - which I had indeed 
mentioned in my lecture - and then referred to my account of how an Afghan 
crowd beat me up last December. I had told the American audience that the 
Afghans were outraged by US bombing raids that had just killed their 
relatives around Kandahar and how important it had been to include this fact 
in my own report of the fray - to give context and reason to the Afghan 
attack on me. The Register used my words to describe the attack but then 
itself made no mention of the reasons. Long live, I thought, the Iowa City 
Press-Citizen, whose own headline - "Middle East reporter slams media" - got 
the point.

It's not that Iowans have any excuse to be unaware of the Middle East. In 
the small town of Davenport, Israelis have been trained in the systems of 
the Apache AH-64 attack helicopters used to assassinate Palestinians on 
Israel's wanted list. According to one local journalist, several Iowa 
companies, including the regional office of Rockwell, have been involved in 
military contracts worth millions of dollars with Israel. CemenTech of 
Indianola supplies equipment to the Israeli air force. The day I arrived in 
Iowa City, John Ashcroft, the US Attorney General, was telling Iowans that a 
hundred foreign nationals "from countries known as home to terrorists" had 
been interrogated in the state. Another hundred were likely to be 
"interviewed" soon. There was no editorial comment on this.

So Iowa University classes were absorbing. One young woman began by 
announcing that she knew the American media were biased. When I asked why, 
she said that "it has to do with America's support for Israel..." and then, 
red-faced, she dried up. Not so the student in Rex Honey's global studies 
class. After I had outlined the military trap into which the Americans had 
been lured in Afghanistan - the supposed "victory" followed by further 
engagements with al-Qa'ida and then, inevitably, daily battles with Afghan 
warlords and sniping attacks on Western troops - he put his hand up. "So how 
do we beat them?" he asked. 

There was a gentle ripple of laughter through the room. "Why do you want to 
'beat' the Afghans," I asked? "Why not help them build a new land?" The 
student came up to me afterwards, hand outstretched. I want to thank you, 
sir, for all you told us," he said. I had a suspicion he was a military man. 
Are you planning to join the army, I asked? "No, sir," he replied. "I'm 
going to join the Marines."

I advised him to stay clear of Afghanistan. In its own way, the American 
national press was doing the same. Two days later, the Los Angeles Times, in 
a remarkable dispatch from its correspondent David Zucchino, reported on the 
bitterness and anger among Afghans whose families had been killed in United 
States B-52 bomber raids. The recent American battle in Gardez, the report 
said, had left "bitterness in its wake".

If only the same bluntness was applied to the Palestinian-Israeli war. Alas, 
no. On the freeway past Long Beach on Friday, I opened the LA Times to be 
told that Israel "mops up [sic] in the West Bank", while the syndicated 
columnist Mona Charen was telling readers in other papers that "98 per cent 
of Palestinians have not been living under occupation since Israel pulled 
out under the Oslo accords" and that the Israeli Prime Minister at the time, 
Ehud Barak, had offered Arafat "97 per cent of the West Bank and Gaza". 

This was 1 per cent higher even than the statistic from "Michael" on 
WSUI/KSUI radio. Arafat - "this murderer with the deaths of thousands of 
Jews and Arabs on his hands" - was to blame. The issue between Israel and 
her neighbours, Charen contended, "is not occupation, it is not settlements 
and it certainly is not Israeli brutality and aggression. It is the Arabs' 
inability to live peacefully with others".

Maybe California is organically different from the rest of the United 
States, but its journalists as well as its students seemed a tad smarter 
than the Midwest of America. The Orange County Register, a traditionally 
conservative newspaper in an area that is now 50 per cent Latino, has been 
trying to tell the truth about the Middle East and was carrying a tough 
feature by Holger Jensen, which warned that if President Bush didn't rein in 
Sharon, the Israeli Prime Minister "will succeed where Osama bin Laden 
failed: forcing us into a war of civilisations against 1.2 billion Muslims". 
When I lunched with senior editorial staff, they invited three members of 
the Orange County Muslim community to join them.

Cocktails with friends of the Methodist church revealed a sane grasp of the 
Middle East - one of them was deeply disturbed by a recent remark by 
Israel's Internal Security Minister, Uzi Landau, who had said that "we're 
not facing human beings, but rather beasts". A black guest commended the UN 
secretary general Kofi Annan's criticism of Israel. Yet when I flipped on 
Fox News, there was Benjamin Netanyahu out-Sharoning Sharon, declaring that 
Palestinian suicide bombers would soon be prowling America's streets, 
meeting Congressmen to enlist their help in Israel's "war on terror", even 
while the US Secretary of State, Colin Powell, was in Israel.

"Why Israel's Mission Must Continue," the New York Times's comment page 
shouted on Friday. A long and tedious article on Israel's crusade against 
"terror" by an Israeli army colonel, Nitsan Alon, included several of my 
favourite cop-out phrases, including the stock reference to "a large number 
of civilians" who were - yes - "caught in the crossfire".

By the time I was addressing the more bohemian denizens of an art club in 
Los Angeles, the newspapers I was attacking were beginning to turn up. Mark 
Kellner arrived to report for The Washington Times. "He's going to stitch up 
everything you say," a friend remarked. "The Washington Times is to the 
right of the Republican Party." We shall see.

But if my audiences had been largely made up of Americans without any Middle 
East roots, the same could not be said of Sunday's cocktails at the home of 
Stanley Sheinbaum, the philanthropist, art collector and libertarian - we 
shall forget the period in which he helped to run the Los Angeles Police 
Department - where my little speech was to set off some verbal hand-grenades.

Sheinbaum it was who met Syria's President Hafez el-Assad at President Jimmy 
Carter's request, arranging Assad's extraordinary summit with Carter in 
Geneva. "Tell me something good about yourself," he said to me. Have you 
heard nothing good from anyone else, I enquired? "Nope," he said.

But I liked Sheinbaum, a crusty, humorous man in his eighties who encourages 
every liberal Jewish American to have his say about the Middle East. As the 
lunchtime fog embraced the rose gardens and villas and swimming pools and 
hills of Brentwood, up stepped Rabbi Haim dov Beliak to explain how he 
intends to close down the bingo and gambling operations of one of America's 
greatest Jewish settlement builders. "Call me when you get back to Beirut - 
by all means write about it." As we scoffed Stanley Sheinbaum's strawberries 
and sipped his fine Californian red wine, another rabbi approached. "You're 
gonna have some hostile people in your audience," he said. "Just let 'em 
hear the truth."

So I did. I talked about the cowardice of Secretary Powell, who dawdled his 
way around the Mediterranean to give Sharon time to finish destroying the 
Jenin refugee camp. I talked about the rotting bodies of Jenin and the 
growing evidence that back in 1982 Sharon's troops handed the survivors of 
the Sabra and Chatila massacre back to their Phalangist tormentors to be 
killed. I said that Arafat was never offered 96 per cent of the West Bank at 
Camp David. 

I advised the 100 or so people in the room to read the Israeli journalist 
Amira Haas' courageous reports in Haaretz. I talked about the squalor of the 
Palestinian camp. I talked of suicide bombings as "evil" but suggested that 
Israel would never have security until it abided by UN Security Council 
Resolution 252; that Israel would never have peace until it abandoned all of 
the West Bank, Gaza, Golan and East Jerusalem.

"I find it very difficult to ask you a question, because what you said made 
me so angry," a woman began afterwards. Why did I not realise that the 
Palestinians wanted to destroy all of Israel, that the right-of-return would 
destroy the state? For an hour I explained the reality I saw in the Middle 
East; an all-powerful Israel fighting an old-time colonial war. I talked 
about the 1954-62 Algerian war, its brutality and cruelty, the French army's 
torture and killings, the Algerians' slaughter of civilians, the frightening 
parallels with the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. 

I talked about the Palestinians who wanted, at the least, an admission of 
the injustice their people had suffered in 1948, adding that there were 
Palestinians aplenty who realised that financial compensation would have to 
suffice for most of those refugees whose homes were in what is now Israel. I 
talked about Sharon and his bloody record in Lebanon. And about the 
pressures of the Israeli lobby in America, the fear of being labelled an 
anti-Semite, and the feeble reporting of the Middle East.

A rabbi was the first to tell me afterwards that the Palestinians were 
victims, that they should be given a real state. An old lady asked me for 
the name of the best book on the Algerian war. I gave it to her; Alastair 
Horne's A Savage War of Peace . A card was pushed into my hand. "Insightful 
talk!" the owner had written at the bottom and - hate though I do the word 
"insightful" - I couldn't help noticing that the name on the card was Yigal 
Arens, the son of one of Israel's most ruthless right-wing ministers, who 
had once informed me - in Beirut, back in 1982 - that Israel would "fight 
forever" against Palestinian terror.

On the freeway to LAX afterwards, the terminals and control tower looming 
through the Californian haze, I looked over Saturday's LA Times. A report on 
page 12 revealed that the BBC's award-winning film on Sharon's involvement 
in the Sabra and Chatila massacres had been dropped from a Canadian film 
festival after protests from Jewish groups. The organisers had explained 
that The Accused "could invite unwanted attention from interest groups" - 
whatever that means. But a paragraph at the end of the report caught my 
attention. "Sharon, who was the Israeli defence minister at the time, 
allegedly facilitated the assault on the Sabra and Chatila refugee camps..." 
There it was again. Allegedly? How many angry letters was that little lie 
supposed to avoid? Allegedly indeed.

But on reflection, I didn't think the Americans I met would be fooled by 
this. I didn't think my hotel proprietor would accept "allegedly". Nor the 
old naval officer from the John F Kennedy.
Nor the listeners to KSUI. Nor even Stanley Sheinbaum. Yes, Osama bin Laden 
told me he thought Americans didn't understand the Middle East. Maybe he was 
right then. But not any more.