BOOK
REVIEW Honey,
he trashed the Bushes! Dude, Where's My Country? by Michael
Moore
Reviewed by Chanakya Sen
Michael
Moore burst into world consciousness with the
Oscar-winning documentary film Bowling for
Columbine (2002), a critical look at the
United States's violent gun culture and
racism. Slipping into the shoes of a political
humorist, Moore then authored the
record-selling non-fiction book of that year, Stupid
White Men, nailing American woes to a
narrow elite of exploitative conservative
males. Carrying forward in the same
self-critical and satirical style, his latest
book, Dude, Where's My Country?, hinges
on the seminal choice facing the world's most
powerful nation: will the 2004 presidential
elections return to power George W Bush,
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and all
their right-wing cronies, or does a fairer
dispensation exist for which Americans are
wise enough to vote?
As behooves a quintessential Moore parody, the
opening page features a fictitious warning by
Tom Ridge, Secretary of the United States
Department of Homeland Security. "If you
have purchased this book we are required to
notify you per Section 29A of the USA Patriot
Act that your name has been entered into a
database of potential suspects. It's too
late! You don't have any rights! You no longer
exist!"
From the beginning, Moore touches on the
September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on New
York and Washington - the subject of his next
movie - writing in his introduction that they
were used by Bush as a "convenient cover,
justification, for permanently altering our
American way of life". Moore repeats this
theme throughout the book, going on to add
that Bush's "band of deceivers", as
he dubs them, used the attacks as the excuse
for every wrongful act the American state has
committed over the past two years. "It is
the manna from heaven the right has always
prayed for," (p 113) Moore writes.
And it doesn't stop there. Aiming to conceal
unanswered puzzles, the Bush administration
stonewalled the special commission
investigating the September 11 attacks from
collecting evidence. Within days of the twin
tower tragedies, the Federal Bureau of
Investigation mysteriously whisked Osama bin
Laden's Saudi relatives to a "secret
assembly point in Texas", and thence out
of the United States. Bush and his
ex-president father have known the bin Laden
family since the late 1970s. A 5-percent
equity of Bush junior's first oil company,
Arbusto, was owned by Osama's brother, Salem
bin Laden. The Carlyle Group, the US's largest
defense contractor, for which Bush senior
acted as "consultant", received a
minimum of US$2 million from the same bin
Laden family.
When the US Congress released its own
investigation into the attacks on September
11, Bush censored 28 pages that revealed a
Saudi hand in the attacks. "Like
Pakistan, Saudi Arabia [would find bin Laden's
arrest] highly embarrassing, exposing his
continuing relationship with sympathetic
members of the ruling elites and intelligence
services of both countries" (p 18). On
September 15, 2001, Bush promised his friend
Prince Bandar bin Sultan, the Saudi
ambassador, to "hand over" al-Qaeda
operatives caught by the US. Affectionately
known in the president's circle as
"Bandar Bush", the ambassador also
succeeded in getting Bush loyalist James Baker
to represent the House of Saud in a lawsuit
filed by victims of the terror strikes.
On page 19 a perplexed Moore addresses Bush:
"Why have you and your father chosen to
align yourselves with a country that is among
the worst and most brutal dictatorships in the
world? Why are you so busy protecting the
Saudis when you should be protecting us?"
Later, Moore addresses the issue of protection
in reference to Attorney General John Ashcroft,
who despite attacking several constitutional
rights after September 11, has since stuck his
neck out to defend the holy cow Second
Amendment right to bear arms. Moore writes:
"When it comes to guns, rights count for
something" (p 25). Such bogus rights, he
argues, must be juxtaposed with the fact that
94 percent of Americans want federal safety
regulations on the manufacture and use of all
handguns.
But lets get back to Bush. As governor of
Texas in 1997, Bush rolled out the red carpet
to the Taliban, who were negotiating Unocal's
natural gas pipeline from Turkmenistan to
Pakistan. Just days before September 11, 2001,
US administration officials again met with
Taliban figures. As soon as the war in
Afghanistan had ended, Bush appointed a Unocal
consultant, Zalmay Khalilzad, as the new US
ambassador to Kabul. Afghanistan's
American-installed president, Hamid Karzai,
also has a Unocal background. In logical
succession, Afghanistan signed the $5 billion
pipeline deal within weeks of the Taliban's
fall. Moore chides Bush for his hypocrisy:
"Go straight for the oil and cut out the
bullshit about nation building or
democracy" (p 125).
In the propaganda blitz before the Iraq war
began, Bush proved the aphorism that "if
you tell a lie long enough and often enough,
it becomes the truth" (p 42). Though
British claims that Iraq tried to buy
"yellow cake uranium" proved false,
the White House kept the hoax alive, showing
documents that carried the signature of the
non-existent Niger foreign minister. The
alleged aluminum tubes "discovery"
that could have lead to nuclear centrifuges
under Iraq's former leader, Saddam Hussein,
was also negated after clarification by the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
Secretary of State Colin Powell's tall talk of
"intelligence" about Iraq's seven
"mobile factories" and of biological
agents "enough to fill 16,000 battlefield
rockets" also fell flat when the
occupying US forces found none. As one
commander on the ground admitted,
"they're simply not there".
Along this line, Moore goes on to list all the
chemical agents US corporations sold to Iraq
between 1985 and 1998. Delinquents include
American Type Culture Collection, Alcolac
International, Matrix-Churchill Corporation,
Sullaire Corporation, Pure Aire and
Gorman-Rupp. While delivered toxins include
Anthrax, Botulinum, Capsulatum, Melitensis,
Perfringens, Escherichia Coli - a cause of
food-borne illness, etc. In addition, American
companies such as Hewlett-Packard, AT&T,
Bechtel, Caterpillar, DuPont, Kodak and Hughes
Helicopter gave Iraq dual-use technologies for
two decades. Many of these companies happened
to be campaign backers of Reagan and the both
Bushes. If Saddam was a devil, "the devil
was actually our devil", cries Moore.
The evidence continues. Bush indulged in a
"continuous loop of lying" by
insinuating a make-believe Saddam-bin Laden
connection when it was known that the al-Qaeda
chief considered the Iraqi dictator an
apostate. The rhetoric of "freeing the
people of Iraq" has also been punctured,
as now the US prepares to "give the
country over to some rabid
fundamentalist". Accusing the French of
being an "axis of weasels" was
"done to distract the American public
from the real rats who were in
Washington" (p 63). While the so-called
"coalition of the willing" was in
reality the "coalition of the
coerced", with citizens of all the
pro-war countries opposing their governmental
imprimaturs. Moore also reminds his readers
that in the US itself, a simple reality is
often forgotten that before the Iraq war
began, a majority of Americans were against an
invasion without allied participation and UN
approval.
Regarding action and death tolls in Iraq,
Moore writes that Pentagon sound bytes on
Lockheed Martin rocket carriers and their
"perfect guidance systems" were pure
shams, as a British-American research group
calculated civilian deaths during the Iraq war
to be between 6,806 and 7,797. "When they
kill civilians we call it terrorism. But we
drop bombs [and] then apologize [for] the
collateral damage spill over" (p 124).
Thanks to the "Fox News effect", the
supposedly liberal American media covered up
what Iraqi civilians went through during the
bombing. American television viewers were
"25 times more likely to see a pro-war US
source than someone with an anti-war point of
view".
Moore tries to make common sense mincemeat of
the exaggerated terrorist threat Bush has used
as a pretext to curtail American freedoms.
Even in the fateful year 2001, "your
chance as an American of dying in an act of
terrorism in this country was 1 in
100,000" (p 96). Mass psychosis and
irrational fear were indoctrinated by the US
government for ulterior ends. Neo-cons Paul
Wolfowitz, Bill Crystal and Richard Perle had
been planning an endless war for long, and
"to maintain an endless war, they need
endless fear" (p 103). The USA Patriot
Act, Total Information Awareness and Policy
Analysis Market were some of the neo-con pet
projects ostensibly created to
"protect" Americans. But if the
neo-cons had a genuine interest in protecting
Americans, Moore asks, why did they ignore the
19 percent increase in homelessness and hunger
in the US from 2001 to 2002. "The war on
terror," he writes, "should be a war
on our own dark impulses" (p 127).
After all, this terrorism was the red herring
behind which "business bandits"
wrecked the US economy. Moore blames the
seductive Horatio Alger myth of rags-to-riches
that prevented chief executive officers from
being punished for robbing millions of small
savers from their life earnings during the
stock market boom (covered more empirically in
economist Joseph Stiglitz's new book, The
Roaring Nineties). The great
"American Dream" was a "ruse
concocted by the corporate powers-that-be who
never had any intention of letting you into
their club" (p 141). Those
"Republicans never want to make their
tent any bigger so that there's room for
you". (p 200)
Between 1999 and 2002, it was these corporate
power and the ultra-rich who knew the economic
downturn was coming and quietly sold off their
stocks. Meanwhile, average investors were
cajoled into staying the course for the
"long run". So "before you knew
it, your money was gone, gone, gone" (p
143). Some of the robber barons were George W
Bush's bosom buddies. Enron chairman Kenneth
Lay, pet-named "Kenny Boy" by the
president, has given $736,800 to the Bushes
since 1993 and allowed Bush junior to use his
corporate jet during the 1999 presidential
campaign. Lay was repaid by Bush by planting
his appointees in the energy department and by
being allowed to draft the US "energy
policy" that unveiled its fangs at Kyoto.
Thus it seems that "one of the greatest
corporate scandals in the history of the
United States was committed by one of the
president's closest friends" (p 150).
Perhaps he was thinking of these friends when
Bush proposed his most recent $350 billion tax
cut, which provides for "millionaires
getting back so many millions", but says
absolutely nothing for poor, low-income
Americans. Those who paid 10-15 percent taxes
still pay 10-15 percent. Twelve million
children whose parents made between $10,000
and $26,000 a year have been excluded from
Bush's so-called present to the wealthy.
Moore concludes by calling on the American
people to overthrow the Republican presidency
this November. Democrats have "basically
written off 2004. They see little chance of
defeating George W Bush" (p 204). But if
they can get women of all colors, as well as
black men and Hispanic men to vote against
Bush, they would have a powerful winning
combination. Moore believes Americans are
liberal at heart, and they are ready for a
female president or a black president.
Television icon Oprah Winfrey could beat Bush,
Moore says. More realistically, Moore is
willing to back any Democratic candidate who
is capable of ousting Bush. However, nothing
should be left to the Democrats who lost after
winning in 2000. "This election will
require the active participation of all of us
to get out there and snatch our country
back" (p 213).
Moore's rib-tickling, comedic call-to-action
uses colloquial American phrases and
references that foreign readers might not
easily vibe with, but the case for Bush's
removal is compelling and unarguable. If
you're an American unsure about who to vote
for, or even if you will vote this November,
this savage comedy is especially packaged for
you.
Dude, Where's My Country? by Michael
Moore (Warner Books, New York, October 2003).
ISBN: 0-446-69262-X; 249 pages. Price:
US$24.95.
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Feb
28, 2004
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