Independent Sentinel

No matter what the news pundits would have you believe, it is always, it seems, the independents who decide elections. We are the great un-party. Independents (small "i") are not ideological. Sentinels are watchers. Figure us out.

Monday, December 25, 2006

U.S. Prime Culprit in Spreading Nuclear Threat


We have been watching this horrifying phenomenon for sometime now, and find it reprehensible, immoral if not amoral, and if it is not out-right criminal, it ought to be.

Is there anything we will not market, not even death and destruction, far more horrible than any of us can imagine.

That's the problem with pure, unchecked capitalism on steroids, it robs us of our very soul, as a nation.

If we have learned anything in the last six miserable years, it is that we cannot allow corporations to police themselves anymore than we would have allowed Ted Bundy to police himself, and we absolutely cannot afford to fill the Executive, ever again, with CEOs, failed or otherwise.

U.S. Prime Culprit in Spreading Nuclear Threat:

Former President Jimmy Carter says by 'rejecting or evading almost all nuclear arms control agreements negotiated during the past 50 years, the United States has now become the prime culprit in global nuclear proliferation.'

In his book 'Our Endangered Values'(Simon & Schuster), Carter leaves no doubt he has that Great Proliferator, George W. Bush in mind, even though he doesn't call him that or mention him by name.

Just as damning, though, Carter quotes an article by ex-Defense Secretary Robert McNamara in last year's May/June Foreign Policy: 'I would characterize current U.S. nuclear weapons policy as immoral, illegal, militarily unnecessary and dreadfully dangerous.' And that indictment can be laid at the feet of only one hombre.


President Bush's voiced his 'preventive war' doctrine in September, 2002, and then gave the world a glimpse of first-strike by invading Iraq. He also poured billions into America's ugly germ warfare labs, morphing them into aggressive postures. And he's the first man in Rome when it comes to renewing the dread nuclear arms race. You wonder where the outcry was from stalwart Republicans when Bush decided to resume nuclear arms development. After all, it was President Reagan's noblest achievement to strike a deal with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to rid the planet of thousands of nukes.

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