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mikjall's avatar

"It’s high time for real, honest, Congressional truth hearings on America’s disastrous wars."

I heartily agree, Mr. Astore, but it won't happen. The key expressions are "real" and "honest". Today's bought-and-paid-for Congresspersons are not up for "real, honest, Congressional truth hearings", such as the Church Committee hearings of yore. Our Congresspersons are as much the defenders, and sources of, the "Great Lying Narrative" as anyone could be. And Congress certainly won't censure the "four stars", who are hired (that is promoted) to high rank precisely in order to support that narrative. As George Carlin used to say—albeit in a slightly different connection—"It's a big club, and you ain't in it". There are some fine, sensible, and principled military men, and perhaps even a few "four stars", who disagree with the Narrative and criticize it behind closed doors. But few of them—and certainly not any of the "four stars"—will curtail their lying to the lumpen public. "Accountability" is now, tragically, as passé as the buggy whip.

Clif Brown's avatar

We know it is wise to doubt what government says because power always seeks to protect itself. Americans should be supporting whistle-blowers at every level of government. Instead the government wants us to think of whistleblowers as disloyal people who should be punished, as traitors rather than courageous people who put informing the public above personal interest.

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