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Good evening. It's Wednesday, November 15. Tonight: ten days after the 9/11 attack, George W. Bush stood before a joint session of Congress and in a speech authored by supreme neocon David Frum, who at the time was Bush's White House speechwriter, uttered this now notorious line which came to define the political climate in the United States for the next several years: “Either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists.” That binary framework, by design. suppressed debate and dissent for years to come in the United States and meant that anyone questioning what the United States government wanted – any war it proposed, any power it seized, any decree it issued – rendered one standing, accused publicly of being pro-terrorist, of supporting al-Qaida, being on the other side. That's what that meant. Either you are with us, the U.S. government, or you're with the terrorists.
That was the climate that produced quick and overwhelming enactment of the Patriot Act, mass warrantless domestic NSA spying, and the invasion and destruction of Iraq that, among other things, gave rise to ISIS, torture chambers, CIA black sites, and multiple wars around the world that impoverished and commiserated American citizens while enriching the military-industrial complex and the arms industry. Every protest and every march against Bush/Cheney's neocon policies in late 2001-2002 and through 2003 were instantly branded as pro-terrorist. Go watch any random Fox News show from 2002 or 2003 to see how that worked. Any Americans who didn't go along had their reputations ruined and were frequently fired. Does that sound familiar? It should, since that's what's been happening over the last five months, five weeks in this country, as much as any civil liberties erosion or unjust and unwise war itself. It was that climate of repression of equating all dissent with being pro-terrorist that caused me to start writing about politics and enter journalism in 2005.
Ever since, many Americans, including many in the elite political media and punditry class, have insisted that they regret those excesses of 9/11 and that they now see how easily they were put into a state of fear that caused them to cheer counterproductive wars and to acquiesce to the erosion of their rights at home. However, after the last five weeks, I'm really left wondering what they regret exactly. It's hard to see anything, given that the same template has once again emerged. Indeed, the Israeli Defense Forces have been consciously copying David Frum's defining phrase that came out of George W. Bush's mouth as they post all over their social media accounts “Either you stand with Israel or you stand with the terrorist.” Here we are right back into the dissent-destroying culture of 2002. Only this time it's being done not in response to an attack on our own country, the United States, but to an attack on the other side of the world on a foreign country that is, in turn, a response to a decades-long, complex conflict over land and statehood that should not be America's war, let alone render people in the United States subject to censorship and reputational destruction for questioning the U.S. role in that war, on whose side the United States should be.
Then: Nikki Haley is easily one of the most warmongering and authoritarian candidates to run for high office in years. We have been reportedly covering – repeatedly covering – some of her more unhinged statements, her cheerleading for every war, her self-serving and self-enrichment by serving Boeing and neocon war groups in DC. But yesterday, she really unveiled the depth of how entrenched her authoritarian instinct is by calling for a law that the U.S. Supreme Court has repeatedly ruled is a direct violation of the First Amendment's core guarantee of free speech. Namely, Nikki Haley vowed that is one of her first acts in office, along with compelling big tech companies to reveal their algorithms and what they support and what they don't. She said she would ban American citizens from expressing themselves on the Internet anonymously or using a pseudonym – both are longstanding and iconic American traditions – and instead will require them to register their names and verify their identity as a legal condition to speaking out on social media. We'll examine just how extremist and repressive this proposal is and what it actually says about Nikki Haley.
Finally, this: as we asked repeatedly at the start of the war in Ukraine, we have been asking since the start of this new war, the one involving Israel, how is it in the interest of American citizens to fund this new war, to make this new war an American war, to invest American resources in fueling a foreign country's military needs, whose citizens, in many cases, enjoy a higher standard of living than many Americans. Polling is starting to show that American citizens are reaching the same conclusion, asking these same questions, and that yet again, there is a massive breach between the views of the American citizenry and what they want and the overwhelming bipartisan consensus in Washington.
For now, welcome to a new episode of System Update, starting right now.