September 14, 2011

9/11 and the National Security Scam

National security is a scam — an $8 trillion scam.

That’s the amount spent since September 11, 2001, on the
military, including the Iraq and Afghan wars, and “homeland security,”
according to Christopher Hellman of the National Priorities Project. If
“veterans benefits, future costs for treating the war-wounded, and interest
payments on war-related borrowing” are added, Hellman writes, the cost is much
higher: $11 trillion, by the estimate of Brown University’s Watson Institute
for International Studies. Hellman says by his reckoning, the full cost of
“security” is $1.2 trillion a year.

And yet officials say Americans must not let down their
guard. The mildest calls for cuts in the rate of growth in military spending
are met with panic by “defense” officials.

Considering that all that spending was triggered by a ragtag
group of airplane hijackers armed with box cutters on 9/11, something just
doesn’t add up. (Locks on flight-deck doors and armed pilots would have averted
the attacks.) As Thomas Paine, the soul of the American Revolution, wrote in
The Rights of Man about the British empire, “In reviewing the history of the
English Government, its wars and its taxes, a bystander, not blinded by prejudice
nor warped by interest, would declare that taxes were not raised to carry on
wars, but that wars were raised to carry on taxes.”

In America’s case, however, it is debt, not explicit taxes,
that was raised. On September 30, 2000, the national debt was $5.67 trillion.
Today it is $14.7 trillion, a 160 percent increase. But debt could well
represent future taxes or inflation, an implicit tax on cash balances — if the
government thinks it can get away with it.

It is said that 9/11 changed everything, but in fact it
changed nothing whatsoever. Opportunistic politicians simply used the attacks
to do much more of what they had already been doing and were hoping to continue
in greater measure. Admittedly they were good at that. The attacks gave them a
unique chance to frighten Americans into acceding to whatever the ruling elite
wanted. As a result, those trillions were spent with little real oversight —
the overseers were part of the conspiracy against the taxpayers. Reports say
that $60 billion in contract money for Iraq and Afghanistan has been diverted
to unknown recipients. The Pentagon routinely loses track of billions of
dollars.

The military-industrial complex has never been larger or
more pervasive. Thousands of companies exist to sell expensive things to the
government. Fortunes have been made. The post–9/11 period has been a feeding
frenzy at the taxpayers’ trough — grand larceny of historic proportions.

The attitude was well illustrated by Rep. James Clyburn, a
South Carolina Progressive Democrat who worries that military spending might be
cut because of concern about the budget deficit. Does he worry because he fears
that security will diminish? No, he explained, he worries because he has
military bases in his congressional district.

And people wonder why the economy is in a rut.

Of course, that is only part of the story. Monetary costs
aside, the security fetish has cost Americans their privacy, turned the
presidency into a virtual autocracy, and further blackened America’s reputation
abroad with civilian-killing drone attacks and house raids in the night. The
image of the United States has been firmly set as The Invader and The Torturer.

But isn’t all that, however regrettable, necessary because
there are people out there who want to kill us? That’s what the
national-security elite would like you to think. We’re told “they” attacked us
because they hate our freedoms. If true, they must surely hate us a lot less
now, thanks to the USA PATRIOT Act. Some say there is an intrinsic conflict between
Islam and the West.

That’s all self-serving nonsense. The 9/11 attacks were
intended as retribution for decades of U.S. policy that has inflicted death and
misery on Arabs through support for oppressive Middle East regimes and direct
military and CIA operations. The attackers committed mass murder, to be sure,
but Americans won’t be safe if they don’t comprehend the danger. U.S. foreign
intervention provoked the attackers, and the U.S. response played into their
hands by creating more people who seek vengeance and by bleeding Americans
financially.

Wherever Osama bin Laden is now, I suspect he’s laughing.

* Sheldon Richman is
senior fellow at The Future of Freedom Foundation (www.fff.org) and editor of
The Freeman magazine.

About Sheldon Richman

Sheldon Richman is senior fellow at The Future of Freedom Foundation (www.fff.org) and editor of The Freeman magazine.

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Mind Matters — Taming the Tyrant Within

“Lead your own life and not the
one projected on you,” notes Marion Woodman, one of the wise elders of the
“tribe” of Jungian analysts. (Carl Jung was, of course, a colleague of Sigmund
Freud; and so just as there are Freudian analysts, there are also Jungian
analysts.)

I came across this quotation in
a new book “Taming Your Inner Tyrant” by Patty de Llosa. In this text, de Llosa
explores how each of us, starting at an early age in our families, constructs
our own inner tyrant from all the projections (labels, stereotyping,
descriptions) placed on us — even before birth.

And from these projections, we
develop a “hypercritical judge” whispering — sometimes shouting — in our ears
about what we’re doing or not doing. “You’re stupid,” “lazy,” or “too fat,” or
“not good enough,” “not talented enough,” “defective,” “you can’t do that,”
“you’ll fail!” “The shoulds,” “the oughts,” “the nevers,” “the no’s.”

In childhood, we internalized
these repetitive messages and in order to truly become adult, no matter our
age, we need to courageously face the inner tyrant whose voice berates us. The
Jungian, James Hollis, (in “What Matters Most”) reminds us that “no matter how
sovereign we believe we are, we remain the lowliest of serfs to the tyrannies
of whatever remains unconscious.”

De Llosa, in her writing,
boldly discloses the steps of her own journey of open dialog with her inner
tyrant. And then she gives clear guidance to the reader to do likewise. The
process is not about killing off the “inner tyrant,” but taming him (or her).

Encountering our inner tyrant
with courage is transformative. What was constricted in our hearts, becomes
open and we are better able to let go into life with joy.

Furthermore, de Llosa’s book
invites us to get to know the tyrant within so that we don’t continue the cycle
of projection onto others. That engenders more tyranny. Marion Woodman (in the
Ravaged Bridegroom) warns us:

“So long as we are blind to our
inner tyrant, we blame an outer tyrant, some person or some system, for
victimizing us. That maintains the split because victim and tyrant are
dependent on each other, and together they must be healed.”

De Llosa’s book is a welcome
aid to this healing. There is no better place than within our own hearts for
the transformation of all tyranny to begin.

About Kayta Gajdos

Dr. Kathleen Curzie Gajdos ("Kayta") is a licensed psychologist (Pennsylvania and Delaware) who has worked with individuals, couples, and families with a spectrum of problems. She has experience and training in the fields of alcohol and drug addictions, hypnosis, family therapy, Jungian theory, Gestalt therapy, EMDR, and bereavement. Dr. Gajdos developed a private practice in the Pittsburgh area, and was affiliated with the Family Therapy Institute of Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic, having written numerous articles for the Family Therapy Newsletter there. She has published in the American Psychological Association Bulletin, the Family Psychologist, and in the Swedenborgian publications, Chrysalis and The Messenger. Dr. Gajdos has taught at the college level, most recently for West Chester University and Wilmington College, and has served as field faculty for Vermont College of Norwich University the Union Institute's Center for Distance Learning, Cincinnati, Ohio. She has also served as consulting psychologist to the Irene Stacy Community MH/MR Center in Western Pennsylvania where she supervised psychologists in training. Currently active in disaster relief, Dr. Gajdos serves with the American Red Cross and participated in Hurricane Katrina relief efforts as a member of teams from the Department of Health and Human Services' Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.Now living in Chadds Ford, in the Brandywine Valley of eastern Pennsylvania, Dr. Gajdos combines her private practice working with individuals, couples and families, with leading workshops on such topics as grief and healing, the impact of multigenerational grief and trauma shame, the shadow and self, Women Who Run with the Wolves, motherless daughters, and mediation and relaxation. Each year at Temenos Retreat Center in West Chester, PA she leads a griefs of birthing ritual for those who have suffered losses of procreation (abortions, miscarriages, infertility, etc.); she also holds yearly A Day of Re-Collection at Temenos.Dr. Gajdos holds Master's degrees in both philosophy and clinical psychology and received her Ph.D. in counseling at the University of Pittsburgh. Among her professional affiliations, she includes having been a founding member and board member of the C.G. Jung Educational Center of Pittsburgh, as well as being listed in Who's Who of American Women. Currently, she is a member of the American Psychological Association, The Pennsylvania Psychological Association, the Delaware Psychological Association, the American Family Therapy Academy, The Association for Death Education and Counseling, and the Delaware County Mental Health and Mental Retardation Board. Woven into her professional career are Dr. Gajdos' pursuits of dancing, singing, and writing poetry.

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The Garden Path: Fall is Planting Time

The Garden Path: Fall is Planting Time

Many of the same people who
can’t wait to visit the garden centers at the first whiff of spring are losing
interest in their gardens by fall. Yet fall is a great time for planting trees,
shrubs, perennials, and turfgrass. In some ways it is a better time for
planting than spring. There are fewer weed problems, fall-planted trees and
shrubs have more time to develop strong roots before summer, and (recent
weather aside) usually there is less chance of excessive rain.

Another advantage of planting in
the fall is that garden centers frequently have plants on sale. The downside is
that the selection is usually narrower. If you buy plants in the fall, examine
them carefully. If the plant has spent the entire summer at the garden center,
it may be root-bound or suffering from stress-related problems. Buy only
healthy plants. No matter how cheap they are, avoid trees with cracked or
ripped bark and plants with disease or insect problems.

Newly planted plants should get
an inch of water (rain or supplemental) a week until the ground freezes. Do not
overwater and don’t worry if the plant does not appear to be growing—it is
developing roots and getting established below ground.

There are some trees that
shouldn’t be planted in fall. Slow-to-establish species that are better planted
in spring include fir, birch, American hornbeam, American yellowwood, ginkgo,
sweetgum, hophornbeam, oak, willow, and bald cypress. Broadleaf evergreens like
rhododendron and narrow-leaved evergreens like yew also prefer to be planted in
the spring.

The fall is also a good time to
move perennials. Take a critical look at your garden. Remove plants that aren’t
working for you and either move them to another spot in the garden or banish
them to the compost pile. Thin out crowded plants.

You can transplant perennials up
to three to four weeks before the ground freezes. Be sure to apply mulch to
hold the moisture and keep the ground warmer, promoting root growth well into
the late fall. This allows time for the roots to establish and not be heaved
out during winter’s freezing and thawing. They should not be fertilized until
spring.

Fall is also the time to make
notes for next year. What worked and what didn’t? Are there empty spots that
need filling? Places you’d like to
replace lawn with a garden bed or lawn alternative such as moss or groundcover?
What do you need more of? Can you replace some of your exotic varieties with
native plants for more wildlife and ecological benefit? Is there a spot for a
bird bath or a new path? You’ll have all winter to scour the garden catalogs.
Now is the time to give yourself some guidelines for what you really want and
need (which never seems to be the same, does it?).

Happy fall gardening!

Want to learn about fall in the
vegetable garden? Join us on October 1 for our workshop Vegetable Gardening:
Focus on Fall, 1pm- 3pm, East Goshen Township Building, 1580 Paoli Pike, West
Chester. Learn more about growing vegetables, fruits, and herbs, with a focus
on end-of-season issues. Registration is required, cost is $10. Call
610-696-3500.

Have a gardening question? Ask a Penn State Master Gardener! Send your questions to
chestermg@psu.edu or call 610-696-3500. And please visit us on Facebook (“Chester County Master
Gardeners”).

* Nancy Sakaduski is
the Chester County Master Gardener Coordinator. Master Gardeners are
trained volunteers who educate the public on gardening and horticultural
issues. In Chester County, they operate through the Penn State
Cooperative Extension office in West Chester. Nancy lives in Pennsbury
Township. She can be reached at nds13@psu.edu.

About Nancy Sakaduski

Nancy Sakaduski is a Master Gardiner with Penn State Extension of Chester County.

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