American Politics is like Syria minus Assad

Has US politics begun to sound to you like a South Front report on the war in Syria? [NOTE] Not sure what your party stands for anymore, or who is behind the IP poster child of the month? Not sure who is about to stab you in the back? Well, that means the Empire of Chaos's US operation is going according to plan.

Donald Trump is merely the American franchise of the Empire of Chaos's (EoC) assault on any government or national grouping that stands in the way of the total domination of the planet by the 1%. Even the minimal sham of a democracy that the US has after 16 years of post-911 neocon subversion and 10 years of neoliberal austerity is no longer tolerable to the EoC.

Readers of C99p are familiar with the EoC and its hybrid war tactics in regions from Ukraine through the Middle East and on to Africa and the Philippines. We know that the goal is to destabilize and destroy target countries, leaving them in anarchy, often splintered into warring subregions, so that the multinational corps and financiers can loot them.

We know just how convoluted Team Chaos, with its seemingly unlimited budget, can get when it encounters resistance. Case in point, the secular state of Syria which has, backed by Iran and Russia, repelled a Takfiri/Sunni EoC assault. Rather than accept defeat, TC has doubled down by occupying Syrian Kurdistan in violation of international law. We know that the Kurds are just the latest fraudulent front group that the US has used in its fake war on terror; we know that the US/KSA/Israel simultaneously continues to fund, advise, and supply various Sunni groups whose names change weekly.

Once you recognize that, to the globalized neoliberal and neocon elites, even the US is merely a source of funds and guns to be manipulated from above, then the analogy to Syria is not as far out as it might first sound. To the elites, the US is just another corrupt banana republic that Wall St has by the balls; and Trump is just another comprador flunky whom they hired because they think he will be effective (well, at least more effective than the Clinton Crime Family) in doing their bidding. After a year, Trump now understands that, as long as he goes along with the neocon warmongers, the elites really do have his back, and that they welcome the chaos he is creating. So, Trump is beginning to enjoy his job.

Donald Trump doesn't know about any of this history and couldn't care less...What he does know, however, is the arts of enforced chaos, deliberate disorder, saying exactly the wrong thing at exactly the wrong time with intent, and jabbing a constant thumb in the eye of the country because he didn't get invited to the right parties back when he was a philandering skinflint landlord who didn't pay his bills...He does not care. He just delights in the mayhem, and of course, the attention.

It's hard to maintain a society when all we talk about is the latest confused nonsense coughed up by the commander-in-chief. When that nonsense blinds us to the fact that Trump and his crew are stealing the furniture right out from under us on a daily basis, it becomes worthy of profound concern.

People seem to think this administration is flailing under the weight of its own inadequacies, but the ultra-conservative Heritage Foundation believes Trump is doing a bang-up job, thank you very much. According to its director of congressional and executive branch relations, Trump has accomplished 64 percent of the 334 agenda items he came into office with, a list that covers a broad spectrum of immigration, tax reform, foreign policy, health care and deregulation issues. That's faster than Reagan, Heritage says. When the Heritage Foundation says you've gone above and beyond Saint Ronnie, it means the wealthy are well pleased...

It goes on and on like this until, for many, a collective throwing-up-of-the-hands takes place, often on a daily basis, because exhaustion and exasperation are now our resting state.

- William Rivers Pitt, Master Troll: Why Trump Deliberately Disrupts the Gun Debate

That's the gist of the essay, the remainder is a bunch of examples of how domestic politics mirrors the situation in Syria.

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The US used to be a middle class, secular democracy with strong civil liberties. Since 1980, it has been ruthlessly targeted by economic and religious fundamentalists - and lately, re-energized white supremacists. Its infrastructure is in ruins. The majority of the population is poor, can't come up with $500 in an emergency. And the citizenry is at each others' throats over various media-inflamed, tribalistic wedge issues.

The GOP are like the various strains of Sunni fundamentalists - crazy fanatics who want to enforce economic and religious fundamentalism at the point of a gun or an eviction notice.

The Corpo-Democrat-promoted IP groups and the McResistance are like the various allies-of-convenience that the US sponsors in the name of protecting Syria from "terrorists". They really aren't here to save the Republic from the GOP, they are just here to hijack any real opposition and divert it into unproductive bickering. The same way that all the US sponsored "moderate rebels" were ineffective, while the Russians could clean up the whole mess in six months with 50 planes and some advisors.

So, just as in Syria, the elites are funding both sides of the fighting in order to keep the chaos growing until the victim country just gives up. The bad news is that America doesn't even have a patriotic leader like Assad (yeah he's an autocrat, but he is a patriot and a secularist). Bernie Sanders could have been that leader, but he either was made an offer he couldn't refuse; or he just plain sold out.

As in Syria, we have the same "poster children of the month" for dramatizing the "good guys" of the McResistance. The McR shines the spotlight on them when it suits their purposes, invoking some domestic version of the bogus "right to protect". When the "month" is up, so is the "protection". Here's a list of the best poster children.

1. BLM

Where today are the BLM and Antifa movements? Well, they served the purpose of smearing Bernie Sanders and ratcheting up the fear to drive people away from genuine left solutions and towards the McResistance. Like religious minorities such as the Zaidi, who were being persecuted by ISIS, these groups got publicity when it fit the narrative. The minute they were no longer useful, they vanished from the media; and the cops went back to murdering blacks and beating up pipeline protestors with impunity.

2. Transgendered

Another poster child, whose "month" may have expired, is the IP hysteria about transgendered children. It began the minute the Gay Rights movement won and the EoC was deprived of that polarizing wedge issue. The unbelievably tiny minoirty of actual transgendered children was used as a litmus test to break up the opposition to the corporatized Democratic leadership while energizing the fundamentalist crazies - and most of the working class who have no time for such snowflake nonsense. A twofer: weaken the left and strengthen the right and keep using sex to divide and conquer the 99%.

3. MeToo

America then moved on to the MeToo movement, whose tactics would appall liberals if the conservatives applied it to them. MeToo is straight out of the hybrid war/Alinsky playbook. It has hijacked and weaponized a legitimate grievance, grabbed the spotlight, added to the chaos, and solved nothing. (Although it did paralyze the Democrats long enough for the obscene Trump tax bill to pass.) Legitimate feminists will be dealing with the backlash to this extra-legal campaign, that is little more than corporate media-enabled scapegoating, for decades. Our democracy will be further degenerated by the legitimation of media scapegoating, anonymous denuncations, and un-appealable administrative punishments, in lieu of actually passing laws that might address the problem.

4. School shootings

It looks like the next "moderate rebel" issue is going to be mass school shootings. (TPTB would never tolerate a genuine issue like economics or the military budget get discussed in the media.) Like feminism, this is a genuine problem. But, like MeToo, TPTB are busy creating a divisive non-solution. Trump simultaneously wants to arm teachers and ban guns. As Mr. Pitt observed, the man (and the media that thrive on his provocations) is maximizing chaos. Now he is overtly pissing off the GOP base, gun owners and 2nd ammendment fanatics - not to mention free traders with his tariffs. It remains to be seen if the NRA folds like the Fundamentalist churches and goes to kiss the Orange Pope's ring. Stay tuned for more chaos.

Meanwhile, the McResistance wets its pants at the thought of standing up to the NRA - even though a majority of the increasingly fringe membership of the NRA is in favor of banning assault weapons. IIRC, even Obama's CDC was pressured to shutdown research on gun violence as an epidemic disease. The McR/Corpo-Dems will let the fight be between Trump and the NRA, guaranteeing that nothing useful will come of yet another opportunity to stop the mayhem.

The non-poster children: the invisible funders

On the right, we don't hear about the Tea Party anymore, they have been re-branded as MAGA, the American Branch of Al Qaida. New conservative splinter groups constantly appear, funded by one or another right wing billionaire. We always hear the agenda of such groups, but we never hear about their funders - people like the Koch Brothers. The McR has the same shtick about the American right as the US has about Syria: We deplore ISIS, but we never mention their Saudi/UAE funders.

On the so-called left, the corporate media and the McResistance crowd are happy to parade the victim of the week, but they will never talk about the globalist billionaires who fund the American version of these "moderate rebels" - folks like George Soros and Haim Saban.

The permanent enemy: Russian "meddling"

The American media seem to be the playing the role of the Syrian Observatory of Human Rights in their made up lies about Russian meddling in American politics. The SOHR consists of literally one guy in Coventry, UK, and is an EU-funded propaganda outlet that publicizes the fraudulent White Helmets. (One of his sources was the infamous "Curveball".) But, the corporate media never tell the truth about SOHR. They give it the same credibility as the Wall St. Journal. Russian "meddling"is the exact same propaganda operation - lies sourced from bogus intelligence operatives and vouched for by TPTB to further the goals of EoC.

IN CLOSING

I'm with OPOL. Its all bullshit. We are not a democracy anymore. The manipulation never stops. No one is on the side of the 99%. As long as the conversation is owned by Trump and the McResistance, we will be treated to endless Kabuki from the useless, "fake news"-censoring corporate media, until the Republic simply gets completely privatized and/or "the beast" gets starved.

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NOTE:

Some snips from South Front reports:

Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (formerly Jabhat al-Nusra, the Syrian branch of al-Qaeda)...Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) has attacked positions of the so-called Syrian Liberation Front (SLF), a coalition of Ahrar al-Sham and Nour al-Din al-Zenki...

Meanwhile, seven al-Qaeda-linked groups operating in Idlib announced a merger into a new force entitled Horas al-Din. The groups involved in effort are Jaysh al-Malahem, Jaysh al-Badiyah, Jaysh al-Sahel, Saraya al-Sahel, Saryat Kabul Jun al- Sharia and Jund al-Aqsa. The newly appeared moderate opposition group will reportedly be headed by Abu Humam al-Shami, a former general commander of HTS.

In Afrin, the Turkish Armed Forces (TAF) and the Free Syrian Army (FSA) have captured the villages of Sinnarah and Anqalah from the Kurdish YPG. In turn, the YPG attacked Turkish forces near the villages of Raco and Jaro.

Is that clear? Smile

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arendt's picture

I must have bored the board to tears, when I thought I was having an insight.

I must have been hallucinating. Time to cut back on the meds. Smile

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CB's picture

@arendt
shit pie we have been served that I couldn't figure out what slice I wanted to discuss without spending a lot of time (which I currently have in short supply).

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CB's picture

"autocrat" when describing Assad. There have been considerable changes within Syria since his father ruled the country.

Autocracy
An autocracy is a system of government in which supreme power (social and political) is concentrated in the hands of one person, whose decisions are subject to neither external legal restraints nor regularized mechanisms of popular control (except perhaps for the implicit threat of a coup d'état or mass insurrection).[1] Absolute monarchy (such as Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Oman, Brunei and Swaziland) and dictatorships (such as North Korea) are the main modern-day forms of autocracy.

The following is the result of the democratic vote taken in 2012 when the constitution was changed. The reason the US/Israel/Saudis tried to prevent this vote from happening was because they knew Assad was very popular with the majority of Syrians. We saw his popularity from the very beginning of the conflict. This was not reported by the western media to any great extent.

English Translation of the Syrian Constitution Modifications
15/02/2012

Article 86

  1. The President shall be elected through a direct vote by the people.
  2. The candidate who obtains the absolute majority of votes shall be elected President. If none of the candidates obtains this absolute majority, the two candidates with the highest number of votes shall stand for election within two weeks.
  3. The Speaker of the House shall announce the results of the elections.

Article 88

  1. The President is elected for seven calendar years beginning from the date of expiration of the term of the incumbent President.
  2. The President may be re-elected for only another single term

Article 100

The President must issue laws passed by the People’s Assembly, and he has the right to object to any decision received by his office for a period of one month. If the People’s Assembly passes the law a second time with two-thirds majority, then it must be issued by the President as law.

U.N. refugee agency: More people returning to Syria in 2017

June 30 (UPI) -- After a mass exodus in recent years, more people are returning to Syria this year, according to data cited Friday by the United Nations' refugee agency.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees issued a report Friday that said there has been a "notable trend of spontaneous returns to and within Syria" so far in 2017.

According to the data, more than 440,000 "internally displaced" Syrians have returned to their homes in the country between January and July.

"In parallel, UNHCR has monitored over 31,000 Syrian refugees returning from neighboring countries so far in 2017," the humanitarian agency added. "Since 2015, some 260,000 refugees have spontaneously returned to Syria, primarily from Turkey into northern Syria."

The Syrian war is NOT (and never was) a civil war. It is a regime change war. No "autocratic" ruler could have withstood the massive attack by the so-called "coalition" for over seven years without the tacit support of a majority of the citizens. The reason for the demand for Assad to go is because of his popular support from ALL factions inside the country. If he is removed, the country will be divided and destroyed - just as was done in Libya.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zGEc-CMsrQs]

History has proven Americans are arguably the easiest people in the world to propagandize. The MSM/Hollywood know how to play them like a fiddle. Makes me fucking sick to watch this shit occurring, over and over and over again. One would think people would learn from their history.

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arendt's picture

@CB

The following is the result of the democratic vote taken in 2012 when the constitution was changed. The reason the US/Israel/Saudis tried to prevent this vote from happening was because they knew Assad was very popular with the majority of Syrians. We saw his popularity from the very beginning of the conflict. This was not reported by the western media to any great extent.

I was hesitant to claim that Assad was an all-around good guy because I was unaware of the stuff you just cited. Corporate censorship strikes again. I really appreciate your contribution to my knowledge base.

I was aware that it was never intended for him to be the ruler, that that role was assigned to his brother, who died unexpectedly. I was aware of the broad support he had in the country. But, since even Stalin had broad support in his fight against Hitler, I had no indication that he had to be a non-autocrat.

Its amazing to me that Syrians want to keep the stupid borders bestowed on them by Sykes-Picot in classic colonial divide-and-rule tactics. But, I guess they had made a country (until the EoC decided they were not cooperative enough.)

Now that I can say he is not an autocrat, America could use a multicultural patriot (without the IP baggage) like him. Because right now, we are more on the road to Libya than to Syria.

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Alligator Ed's picture

@arendt BUT I fail to see that the Kurds are a fake group. They have their own culture and social identity.

The Kurds (Kurdish: کورد‎) or the Kurdish people (Kurdish: گەلی کورد‎), are an ethnic group[24] in the Middle East, mostly inhabiting a contiguous area spanning adjacent parts of southeastern Turkey (Northern Kurdistan), northwestern Iran (Eastern Kurdistan), northern Iraq (Southern Kurdistan), and northern Syria (Western Kurdistan).[25] The Kurds are culturally, historically and linguistically classified as belonging to the Iranian peoples.[26][27][28]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurds

.

They were victimized just as much by the British engendered nation sundering after the War to End All Wars (no which one was that?)

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arendt's picture

@Alligator Ed

I thought I was responding to your comment, but instead replied to the OP.

Having all comment boxes open at the bottom is very confusing.

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it's a very comprehensive lay-out, a lot to absorb even though in agreement and appreciating the sense it makes - and I know I read it late at night and am now back, rather groggily absorbing coffee.

OT: Not awake enough to comment even from my position in the peanut gallery and need to re-read the essay when feeling better; wandered on site looking for a place suitable to post a Redacted video I'd wanted to see but which did not show as being on Youtube in a DDG search, although it did on titles on jackpineradicals and something called 1clickdaily.com, but nowhere else even though it showed in upcoming Youtube videos down the side of one I was watching, that being why I searched it on another page and then thought it might be important to post here where it could be seen, in case it can't be searched at all. But immediately saw a comment here and popped in to see what might have been added to this essay, which I'd been impressed with... but I've already cluttered up your thread without adding anything of substance, except to point out that some of the best essays on here leave nothing to be added, especially from those of us (me, lol) tossing in the odd shell from the peanut gallery.

Edit: and cleverly managed a letter-typo... and re-edited, having failed to notice I'd also managed to add block-quotes rather than bolding. Need a coffee for each eyelid, and another in case that 3rd eye ever opens, since coffee doesn't always help and I miss a lot, generally until I'm actually waiting for something to post - and too-often thereafter, lol.

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

arendt's picture

@Ellen North

Some folks are just beat by Friday night and use Saturday just to catch up on sleep.

Have you tried colonic injections of coffee? (just kidding, sorry if its too gross) Smile

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@arendt

Yeah and some 9-to-5ers have weekend family time, kids to drive places, shopping and week-end jobs, etc. Not to mention house-work/yard-work catch-up. So many interesting essays and too-little time to keep up with them, even for those of us practically house-bound and internet-glued... the site, as you've doubtless noted, has been pretty dead yesterday and today. And there is a problem with clicks disappearing, so I expect that you've had far more readers and approvers than shows. Just that some of the really good essays leave some of us speechless as far as having anything to add goes.

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

The Aspie Corner's picture

Both groups are the whiniest Injustice Collectors on the planet. Meanwhile, both ignore actual injustices.

I'm also done with the Gundamentalists. Those stupid fucks and their constant conspiracies about false flags and crisis actors can all go to hell. Yes, Sane Progressive, that includes you.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0bhsRNEBbDg]

None of these groups give an actual fuck about the state of America as a whole, and they never will. The only thing any of these groups care about is 'winning'. Too bad there won't be much left to celebrate after this reactionary shitstorm finally ends.

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Modern education is little more than toeing the line for the capitalist pigs.

Guerrilla Liberalism won't liberate the US or the world from the iron fist of capital.

arendt's picture

my analogy has overlapping contexts. I ask you to keep in my the amount of writing required below to explain my take on the Kurds, and cut me some slack for using some verbal shorthand.

My complete quote about the Kurds is one of those situations:

TC has doubled down by occupying Syrian Kurdistan in violation of international law. We know that the Kurds are just the latest fraudulent front group that the US has used in its fake war on terror

We need to take the context back to the beginning of the war.

Earlier on in the War on Syria, the US pretended that the "moderate rebels" were real, when in fact the action was being driven by Takfiri Sunni groups funded by KSA and greenlighted by the US. When those groups failed, the US started supporting ISIS, at first in Iraq, but then in Syria. And of course, ISIS was another creation of the US, supplied with arms looted from Libya, supplied through our ally Turkey, and advised by various alphabet soup agencies.

It is only at this point that our "fake war on terror" in Syria begins. So that's a lot of context already under the bridge, and I haven't even talked about the Kurds yet.

Now that ISIS existed, the US doubled down on the "moderate rebel" strategy, flushing close to a $1 B to train 50 "MRs" who promptly surrendered to ISIS and handed over more weapons. Coupled with the fleets of new Toyotas and divisions worth of equipment looted from the Iraqi "ghost divisions", the US had a perception problem. To the average person, it looked like the US was supplying ISIS.

Still with me? Its only at this point that the Syrian Kurds enter the picture.

They first appear bravely fighting ISIS at Kobani on the Turkish border. As you say, they were not a fake group. They were photogenic women soldiers who fought well. (I hate the terms "fighter" and "warrior".) They were the "moderate rebel" boots on the ground that the US desperately needed for credibility, even if they avoided fighting the Syrian government directly (only indirectly by carving out their Rojava enclave).

One clue that they are being used is that the US has been willing to overlook their bizarre politics, which is modelled on the anti-authoritarian neo-Zapatista movement and the theories of US libertarian/anarchist Murray Bookchin.

Rojava, the Anarchist Community Emerging from the Syrian Civil War

How can any group of anarchists be anything but a "fraudulent front group" for US foreign policy? And anything but doomed?

It is only as Assad has practically won the war that the Kurds have been repurposed into yet another weapon against the Syrian government - a weapon that is guaranteed to fail, but still keep the chaos alive in Syria.

It is the shifting context of our motivations for the Kurds that causes the confusion. I was conflating the Kurds anti-ISIS role in 2012, and then jumping ahead to their role today: attempting to fragment Syria. The fact that they turned from anti-terrorist to pro-independence is why I say they were "fraudulent front group". They were always envisioned as breaking up Syria, the anti-terrorism was merely a convenient excuse to arm them and publicize them.

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Its guaranteed to fail because four countries will not allow the Kurds to be an independent country. Foremost among them, Turkey, now invading Syria to fight them. Second, Iraq, who just shut down another attempt at succession by the Barzani Mafia. Third, Iran, who has the same issue as Turkey. And, fourth, Syria.

Any Kurd in their right mind would recognize the hopelessness of trying to be independent, and settle for the federated status on offer from both Syria and Iraq. But the US is going to fight to the last Kurd and has set up 10 bases in Rojava. This will fail like every other scam in Syria - although it could start WW3 in the process, which is something the neocon ghouls would be quite OK with.

In closing, you asked. Smile I hope my explanation is (as) clear (as the mess in Syria) Smile

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