North Korea's Nukes - Gwinnett Daily Online Reader Input
GDO Reader Opinion
LAWRENCEVILLE - America woke several days ago to the surprise of North Korean nuclear tests.
While Bush has been focusing on responding to Iran's nuclear potential, North Korea has been steadily developing its capacity to do our allies immediate harm. And recently, Kim Jong-Il demonstrated that capacity, went on to threaten Japan and South Korea, and made plans to explode more devices. He then expressed an eagerness to export nuclear technology to other nations, and Bush's first comments were to rule out a military response.
Bush waving an olive branch? Hmmm. Before the US invaded Iraq, Bush convinced America that a suspicion that a nation possesses weapons of mass destruction is reason to invade it. And today, he's steadily building a similar case against Iran. But North Korea has nukes, and rattles its saber regularly, rattles it with enough conviction that Japan is considering ditching its non-militarism, and China now seeks sufficient armaments to respond to anything Kim Jong-Il might attempt. I believe they call that an Arms Race, one that would be devastating for the entire region. Yet Bush downplays this reality, and instead, continues slamming Iran. Is the President not very bright, or just working for somebody else?
He's working for somebody else. President Bush is an Oil Man, and his years of public service will amount to a blip on the screen of a lifelong quest to seek money in Oil. Visit http://www.mypetgoat.50megs.com/ to learn more about that. Not surprisingly, when he brought his team to the White House, they were mostly lifelong oil or related industry careerists of some sort (Visit the links listed below this article). In fact, never in the history of America has a single industry's interests dominated a President's agenda until Bush. Of course, the current Republican congressional majority has a similar focus. Visit http://www.mypetgoat.50megs.com/opensecret.htm to learn how the oil and related industries have come to increasingly dominate overall donations to the Republican party over the last 10 years.
What's at the root of America's off-kilter foreign policy? Single-industry dominance of Republican interests in Washington. We're so used to this by now, we don't even see it. For a moment, then, let's imagine a different industry holding sway in the White House. Imagine America electing a Silicon Valley executive for President. He'd bring all his high-tech buddies with him to the White House, and the halls of Congress suddenly start to look like a Microsoft convention. Let's say this President starts to center our foreign policy around nations with strategic chip manufacturing capabilities. We'd not stand for it, would we? We'd say "What you're doing doesn't serve America's interest, only your own." But since we are so used to hearing Liberals complain about "Big Oil," we don't really pay attention to how much the Oil Agenda has come to define America's world goals.
And, as a result of our blindness, one of our deepest collective fears has come true: A near-madman possesses nukes. Is this what it takes to get us to send the Republicans home this fall? I hope we finally do it.
Links for exploring President Bush's Oil-Friendly Cabinet: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/1138009.stm http://multinationalmonitor.org/mm2001/01may/may01bushcc.html http://crikey.com.au/articles/2003/01/31-oilandiraq.html http://www.utne.com/cgi-bin/udt/im.display.printable?client.id=utne_web_specials&story.id=11232
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