Friday, February 02, 2007

No Mention of "the No. 1 Domestic Terrorism Threat" in State of the Union

by Will Potter

January 24th, 2007

http://www.greenisthenewred.com/blog/2007/01/24/state-of-the-union/#more-203

If by now it isn't clear that "eco-terrorism" rhetoric has nothing to do
with national security, protecting civilians or even the broader "War on
Terrorism" how most supporters view it, take a look at the president's State
of the Union address Tuesday night.

John Lewis, the FBI's top dog on domestic terrorism, has said: " The No. 1
domestic terrorism threat is the eco-terrorism, animal-rights movement."
Other top level government officials have said the same, and that rhetoric
has worked its way into memos by the Department of Homeland Security and the
State Department.

The president talked a lot about terrorism and national security last night,
so one would assume that the "number one domestic terrorism threat" would
make the cut. Nope. Not even a passing mention. The president does indicate
who owns the number two spot, and it's not "eco-terrorists." He discussed
the threat of "Hezbollah -a group second only to al Qaeda in the American
lives it has taken."

If the president is evaluating terrorists in terms of the threat they pose
to human life, which I would say is a pretty fair metric, then even the most
militant animal rights and environmental activists probably couldn't even
make the Top 10: those activists have not claimed a single human life.

There's clearly a disconnect here. Corporations and the politicians that
represent them are using the War on Terror to push a political agenda, and
silence dissent, but they know good and well that the general public
wouldn't take too kindly to a State of the Union address calling activists
"the number one domestic terrorism threat." The New McCarthyists aren't
ready for that level of scare-mongering. Yet.

But if the "eco-terrorism" rhetoric doesn't have anything to do with
national security, what is it about? Money. (And politics. But most days
here in D.C. those two words are interchangeable). To put it another way,
it's about squashing those extremists who challenge the fundamental American
ideology that the dollar trumps all (including the environment and animals).
This "war" is a culture war. Bush put it crystal clearly last night: "This
war is more than a clash of arms -it is a decisive ideological struggle."

Gathered by Sylvie K
Posted by Miriam V.

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