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3 March 2010 By Stephen Lendman
Post-9/11, Dick Cheney warned of
wars that won't end in our lifetime. Former CIA
Director James Woolsey said America "is engaged in
World War IV, and it could continue for years....This
fourth world war, I think, will last considerably
longer than either World Wars I or II did for us." GHW
Bush called it a "New World Order" in his September
11, 1990 address to a joint session of Congress as he
prepared the public for Operation Desert Storm.
The Pentagon called it the "long
war" in its 2006 Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR),
what past administrations waged every year without
exception since the republic's birth, at home and
abroad. Obama is just the latest of America's warrior
presidents that included Washington, Madison, Jackson,
Lincoln, T. Roosevelt, Wilson, F. Roosevelt, Truman,
Johnson, Nixon, Reagan, GHW Bush, Clinton, and GW Bush
preceding him.
This article covers WW II and its
aftermath history of imperial wars for unchallengeable
global dominance throughout a period when America had
and still has no enemies. Then why fight them? Read
on.
Wars Without
End
America glorifies wars in the
name of peace, what historian Charles Beard (1874 -
1948) called "perpetual war for perpetual peace" in
describing the Roosevelt and Truman administrations'
foreign policies - what concerned the Federation of
American Scientists when it catalogued about 200
post-1945 conflicts in which America was, and still
is, the aggressor.
Historian Gore Vidal used Beard's
phrase in titling his 2002 book, "Perpetual War for
Perpetual Peace" and saying:
"our rulers for more than half a
century have made sure that we are never to be told
the truth about anything that our government has done
to other people, not to mention our own."
In his 2002 book "Dreaming War,"
he compared GW Bush's imperial ambitions to WW II and
the 1947 Truman Doctrine's pledge:
"To support free peoples who are
resisting attempted subjugation by armed minorities or
by outside pressures."
It was to keep Greece and Turkey
from going communist, but it applied globally and
initiated America's National Security State strategy
that included:
-- NATO in 1949 for offense, not
defense;
-- NSC-68 against Soviet Russia
in 1950 to "contain" what was called an enemy "unlike
previous aspirants to hegemony....animated by a new
fanatic faith, antithetical to our own (wishing to)
impose its absolute authority over the rest of the
world" at a time America was the only global
superpower, the Soviet Union lay in ruins, threatened
no one, and needed years to regain normality.
Then came:
-- Truman's instigated June 25,
1950 war after the DPRK retaliated in force following
months of ROK provocations, what Americans call the
Korean War, South Koreans the 6-2-5 War (meaning June
25), and the North its "fatherland liberation war"
that left it in ruins, the South occupied to this day,
and it was only the mid-century beginning as
succeeding administrations continued an agenda for
what's now called "full spectrum dominance" for global
US hegemony.
It worried historian Harry Elmer
Barnes (1889 - 1968) in his 1953 collection of leading
historical revisionists' essays titled, "Perpetual War
for Perpetual Peace: A Critical Examination of the
Foreign Policy of Franklin Delano Roosevelt and It's
Aftermath" in which he wrote in the preface:
"If trends continue as they have
during the last fifteen years, we shall soon reach
this point of no return, and can only anticipate
interminable wars, disguised as noble gestures for
peace. Such an era could only culminate in a third
world war which might well, as Arnold J. Toynbee has
suggested, leave only the pygmies in remote jungles,
or even the apes and ants, to carry on 'the cultural
traditions' of mankind."
He cited how America's "needless"
entry into two world wars converted its pre-1914 dream
"into a nightmare of fear, regimentation, destruction,
insecurity, inflation, and ultimate insolvency." He
debunked the cause and merits of WW I, "the folly of
our entering it, and the disastrous results that
followed." He cited "popular fictions" about WW II,
the injustices to Germany and Austria that caused it,
the war Roosevelt wanted early in the 1930s as
captured Polish documents and the censored Forrestal
Diaries confirmed.
Before it began, he wanted US
neutrality legislation ended, then after September
1939, he dropped any pretense by supporting Britain
and France and opposing peace efforts after Poland's
defeat. His June 1940 "dagger in the back" address was
a de facto act of war by beginning vast amounts of
weapons and munitions shipments to Britain after
Dunkirk, followed by the September 1940 (peacetime)
Selective Service Act, the first in US history, in
preparation for what close advisor Harry Hopkins told
Churchill in January 1941 that:
"The President is determined that
we shall win the war together. Make no mistake about
it," followed by Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral
Harold Stark telling his fleet commanders that "The
question of our entry into the war now seems to be
when, and not whether."
Only a pretext was needed, first
by trying and failing to provoke Germany, then
deciding Japan would be attacked, whether or not it
struck US ships, territory, or forces in the Pacific.
In a July 4 radio broadcast, Roosevelt said:
"solemnly (understand) that the
United States will never survive as a happy and
fertile oasis of liberty surrounded by a cruel desert
of dictatorship." Then his July 25 Executive Order
froze Japanese assets, stating it was:
"....To prevent the use of the
financial facilities of the United States in trade
between Japan and the United States in ways harmful to
national defense and American interests, to prevent
the liquidation in the United States of assets
obtained by duress or conquest, and to curb subversive
activities in the United States."
Britain followed suit the next
day, and Roosevelt nationalized the Philippines' armed
forces "as Commander-in-Chief of the Army and Navy of
the United States" with dominion over its Asian
colony.
As early as 1937, he planned a
naval blockade, but dropped the idea after an adverse
reaction. It resurfaced in 1938 because he knew
strangling Japan economically assured war.
Throughout his administration,
from 1933 through late 1941, he spurned Japanese peace
overtures that would have protected all American
interests in the Pacific. By November 25, the final
die was cast. America chose war, and on that day, War
Secretary Henry Stimson wrote in his diary that it
depended only on how to maneuver Japan to attack with
the lowest number of US casualties.
Tokyo had no other recourse,
knowing it couldn't win, but hoping for a negotiated
settlement to solidify whatever Asian control it could
retain. It failed, lost the war, and remains an
occupied US vassal state.
In the late 1930s, Roosevelt
encouraged a Japanese attack by stationing the Pacific
Fleet at Pearl Harbor against the advice of two key
admirals, James Richardson, Pacific Fleet commander
and Harold Stark, Chief of Naval Operations until
March 1942.
Selling arms to Japan's enemies
and an embargo assured war, and US cable documentation
confirmed it was coming. Breaking the Japanese code
let Britain and Washington track its fleet from the
Kurile Islands to its North Pacific refueling point en
route to Pearl Harbor on or about December 7.
At a December 5 cabinet meeting,
Navy Secretary Frank Knox said: "Well, you know Mr.
President, we know where the Japanese fleet is?"
"Yes, I know," responded
Roosevelt, saying "Well, you tell them what it is
Frank," who explained where it was, where it was
heading until Roosevelt interrupted adding that
perfect information wasn't available in spite of navy
reports confirming it in Pacific waters heading toward
Hawaii. On December 6, officials awaited the attack
until it came the next morning at 7:55AM Hawaii time.
It was a day of infamy and
deceit, with Pearl Harbor's commander, Admiral HE
Kimmel, denied crucial intelligence to let it proceed
unimpeded, arouse public anger, and give FDR his war -
one decoded Japanese messages showed they didn't want
but Roosevelt gave them no choice.
Like other presidents, he lied
the country into war against the wishes of 80% of the
public, at a cost of millions of lives in both
theaters, and a policy henceforth of perpetual wars
for perpetual peace to achieve unchallengeable US
dominance. In the modern era, FDR's foreign policy
began it, leaving a bankrupted moral and political
legacy active to this day.
Consider also what revisionist
historians say about Lincoln - that he provoked the
Fort Sumpter (in Charleston, SC harbor) attack and
began the Civil War for economic reasons, not to end
slavery.
Consider also that ordinary
people and soldiers don't want war, just their leaders
and commanders - to wit, Christmas 1914 during WW I
when German and British troops stopped fighting,
didn't know why they were doing it, then defied orders
by fraternizing with each other for two weeks despite
risking being court-martialed. Unable to stop them,
their officers joined them in a celebratory pause that
didn't stop another three years of carnage, millions
of lost lives, and post-war policies that assured WW
II.
The lesson is clear. All wars are
immoral, unnecessary, and only happen when one side
provokes the other for reasons unrelated to national
security threats.
In his seminal book, "A Century
of War," Gabriel Kolko called the 20th century:
"the bloodiest in all history.
More than 170 million people were killed," 70% of whom
in WW II were civilians, "mainly (from) the bombing of
cities by Great Britain and America." There was
nothing good about "the good war" nor any others.
In Kolko's later book "Another
Century of War," he stressed how America contributes
to much of the world's disorder through its
interventions and as the world's largest arms producer
and exporter. Post-WW II, the US became a global
menace, today claiming "terrorism" as the main threat
- a bogus fiction to justify militarism, perpetual
wars heading the nation for moral, political and
economic bankruptcy. According to Kolko:
"The way America's leaders are
running the nation's foreign policy is not creating
peace or security at home or stability abroad. The
reverse is the case: its interventions have been
counterproductive."
In his newest book, "The World in
Crisis," Kolko believes that America's decline "began
after the Korean War, was continued in relation to
Cuba, and was greatly accelerated in Vietnam - but (GW
Bush did) much to exacerbate it further." He also
thinks:
-- US power is declining
everywhere;
-- "the world is no longer
dependent on its economic might" because other nations
like China and India are growing and may some day
equal or surpass America;
-- after the Soviet Union's
collapse, "the absence of identifiable foes has been a
disaster, leaving the US aimless - (so) it picks and
chooses enemies: rag-tag Afghan tribesmen, Iraqis or
all sorts, perhaps China, perhaps Russia....South
American caudillos," whatever bogus ones can be
invented for imperial wars, but the justification is
wearing thin, and the burgeoning cost unsustainable.
The result is that America's
"century of domination is now ending."
America's
Permanent War Economy
It's how Seymour Melman (1917 -
2004) characterized it in his books and frequents
writings on America's military-industrial complex. One
of his last articles was titled "In the Grip of a
Permanent War Economy (CounterPunch, March 15, 2003)
in which he said:
"at the start of the twenty-first
century, every major aspect of American life is being
shaped by our Permanent War Economy." He then examined
the horrific toll:
-- a de-industrialized nation,
the result of decades of shifting production abroad
leaving unions and communities "decimated;"
-- government financing and
promoting "every kind of war industry and foreign
investing by US firms;" war priorities take precedence
over essential homeland needs;
-- America's "Permanent War
Economy....has endured since the end of World War
II....Since then the US has been at war - somewhere -
every year, in Korea, Nicaragua, Vietnam, the Balkans,
Afghanistan - all this to the accompaniment of shorter
military forays in Africa, Chile, Grenada, Panama,"
and increasingly at home against its own people;
-- "how to make war" takes
precedence over everything leaving no "public
space....on how to improve the quality of our lives;"
-- "Shortages of housing have
caused a swelling of the homeless population in every
major city (because) State and city governments across
the country have become trained to bend to the needs
of the military....;" the Chicago Coalition for the
Homeless (CCH) currently estimates over 21,000 are on
city streets nightly, and during winter months it's
dangerous;
-- the result is a nation of
growing millions of poor, disadvantaged, uneducated,
and "disconnected from society's mainstream, restless
and unhappy, frustrated, angry, and sad;"
"State Capitalism" characterizes
America's government - business partnership running a
war economy for greater power and wealth at the
expense of a nation in decline, corrupted leadership,
lost industrialization, crumbling infrastructure, and
suffering millions on their own, uncared for,
unwanted, ignored, and forgotten.
Melman stressed that:
"Further evasion is out of order.
We must come to grips with America's State Capitalism
and its Permanent War Economy." Re-industrialization
is essential "to restore jobs and production
competence - industry by industry."
"Failing that, there is no hope
for any constructive exit," for the nation or its
people.
Dwight
Eisenhower's January 17, 1961 Address to the Nation
It was his farewell address
delivered 30 years to the day before Operation Desert
Storm began in which he warned about the
"military-industrial complex," citing the "grave
implications" of a "coalition of the military and
industrialists who profit by manufacturing arms and
selling them to the government."
He stated "we must guard against
the acquisition of unwarranted influence....by the
military-industrial complex. The potential for the
disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will
persist."
He also said that:
"Every gun that is made, every
war ship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in
the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are
not fed, from those who are cold and not clothed," the
result of what some analysts call the "iron triangle"
of Congress, the Pentagon, and the defense industry
that includes producers of sophisticated technology
for digital age warfare of a kind Eisenhower never
imagined.
In combination, they've addicted
America to war, not for threats, but for the power and
profits that result. In his book "The Political
Economy of US Militarism," Professor Ismael
Hossein-Zadeh refers to "parasitic military
imperialism," consuming over 40% of the national tax
revenue at the expense of unmet human needs.
Morality aside, it's not
justified economically. It's wasteful, inefficient,
comes at a great cost, and over time is ineffective
and self-destructive.
"The control over huge amounts of
national resources tends to lead to an undermining of
democratic values, a perversion of republican
principles and a reduction of civil freedoms, as well
as to the political corruption at home and abroad."
Moreover, "The constant need for international
conflicts makes (America's) military
imperialism....more dangerous than the imperial powers
of the past."
It's made war-making a giant
enterprise "not only for expansionism but, in fact,
for the survival of this empire," yet consider the
fallout Hossein-Zadeh examined in a July 10, 2007
article titled, "Parasitic Imperialism:"
-- the redistribution of income
and resources to the wealthy;
-- the undermining of physical
and human capital;
-- the nation's increased
vulnerability to natural disasters;
-- economic and financial
instability, the result of the growing national debt
now totally out of control;
-- less foreign market potential
for non-military ventures;
-- the undermining of civil
liberties and democratic values; and
-- "foster(ing) a dependence on
or addiction to military spending, and, therefore....a
spiraling vicious circle of (unsustainable) war and
militarism" that's sucking the nation into decline.
America's
Post-WW II Imperial Grand Strategy
Post-WW II, America emerged as
the world's sole superpower - economically,
politically and militarily, given the war's toll on
East Asia, Europe and Soviet Russia. In his book, "The
Cold War and the New Imperialism," Professor Henry
Heller examined it with emphasis on the Cold War,
America's containment policy, and its efforts against
leftist forces in support of fascist elements on the
right at both state and local levels.
The Soviet Union controlled
Eastern and Central Europe while Mao's War of
Liberation defeated Chiang Kai-Shek Nationalists. Cold
War confrontation followed. It pitted US imperialism
against an opposing ideology, the aim being which side
would triumph or could both co-exist peacefully and
avoid conflict.
War was never an option given
each side's nuclear strength under a policy of
"mutually assured destruction (MAD)". In addition,
post-Stalinist Russia began reforms and expanded its
sphere of influence. It wasn't to destroy the West,
but to co-exist equally. America and Soviet Russia
only competed for developing country allies to keep
them from the opposing camp, so neither would be
dominated by the other or more vulnerable to being
isolated, marginalized, or shut out from world markets
and influence.
US Imperialism
Post-WW II
James Petras and others have said
behind every imperial war is a great lie, the more
often repeated the more likely to be believed because
ordinary people want peace, not conflict, so it's
vital to convince them.
In the 1950s, the Eisenhower
administration overthrew two popularly elected
governments in Iran and Guatemala, and sought greater
influence in Africa and Southeast Asia as
anti-colonial movements gained strength.
On January 1, 1959 Fidel Castro's
socialist revolution ousted the US-backed Batista
dictatorship. He then survived America's failed 1961
Bay of Pigs invasion, but faced decades of US
hostility, including an embargo, destabilization,
intimidation, and hundreds of attempts to kill him,
unsuccessful so Cuba is still free from US dominance,
but hardly safe from its northern hegemon.
In the 1950s, America also backed
French Southeast Asian imperialism until defeat at
Dien Bien Phu drove them out. A repressive South
Vietnamese client regime was established at the same
time, supported by US military advisors teaching war
and repression tactics. Unifying North and South
elections were blocked, and direct intervention began
in 1961. In 1958, Washington also subverted Laotian
democracy and incited civil war. Cambodia as well was
targeted but remained free.
Early in his administration,
Kennedy intervened, but a new James Douglass book
titled "JFK and the Unspeakable: Why He Died and Why
It Matters" says without conviction because he opposed
using force. After the Joint Chiefs demanded troops
for Laos, he told his Geneva Conference
representative, Averell Harriman:
"Did you understand? I want a
negotiated settlement in Laos. I don't want to put
troops in."
He wouldn't agree to using
nuclear weapons in Berlin and Southeast Asia and
refused to bomb or invade Cuba during the 1962 missile
crisis, saying afterwards that "I never had the
slightest intention of doing so."
In June 1963 (a few months before
his assassination), he called for the abolition of
nuclear weapons, ending the Cold War, and moving
forward for "general and complete disarmament." In
October 1963, he signed National Security Action
Memorandum (NSAM) 263 to withdraw 1,000 US forces from
Vietnam by year end and all of them by 1965. He said
he wanted "to splinter the CIA in a thousand pieces
and scatter it to the winds." He wanted peace, not
conflicts. It cost him his life, and future presidents
got the message.
Johnson resumed Southeast Asian
escalation to establish client regimes and military
bases across East and South Asia, encircle China, and
crush nationalist anti-imperial movements. The
Indochinese war engulfed Cambodia and Laos as well
under Johnson and Nixon. It killed three to four
million, inflicted vast amounts of destruction, caused
incalculable human suffering, got America to sign a
peace treaty in January 1973, but war continued until
its clients were defeated in April 1975.
Prior to Reagan's election, the
"Vietnam syndrome" and easing Cold War tensions and
disarmament efforts alarmed militarists to fear
defense spending cuts detrimental to profits. A
propaganda campaign exaggerated bogus threats,
manipulated intelligence to heighten fear, and got the
Reagan administration to approve large military
spending increases to confront "Soviet expansionism"
at a time it was transitioning from Brezhnev,
Andropov, and Chernenko to Gorbachev in 1985, followed
by perestroika in 1986, glasnost in 1988, border
openings and the Berlin Wall's collapse in 1989, then
the Soviet Union's dissolution in 1991 - a new threat
militarists feared would bring large, not to be
tolerated, defense budgets cuts.
In the late 1980s, however,
leading figures, including Henry Kissinger, Zbigniew
Brzezinski, Samuel Huntington, and Albert Wohlstetter
alleged Third World conflicts threatened US interests
in the Middle East, Mediterranean, and Western
Pacific, and recommended deterrence to stop them.
Joint Chiefs Chairman Colin Powell and Defense
Secretary Dick Cheney agreed. Others wanted large
defense cuts for a peace dividend, including Johnson's
DOD chief Robert McNamara who proposed reductions up
to 50%.
Throughout the 1989 - 1999
period, mostly under Bill Clinton, US-instigated
provocations, sanctions, and armed insurrections
support involved America in 134 military operations
according to the Federation of American Scientists.
The most egregious was Clinton's bombing and
dismemberment of Yugoslavia, an act playwright Harold
Pinter called:
"barbaric" and despicable,
"another blatant and brutal assertion of US power
using NATO as its missile" to consolidate "American
domination of Europe." Worse was yet to come with the
election of George Bush, America's worst president in
a country that never had a good one and never will as
it's now governed.
Long before 9/11, Middle East
restructuring plans were based on bogus terrorist,
rogue state, and "clash of civilizations" threats by
hordes of Islamofascists, including the Palestinian
resistance, the Islamic Republic of Iran, and Saddam
Hussein targeted in the 1990 - 91 Gulf War, followed
by years of devastating sanctions, then ousted by GW
Bush in 2003.
Iraq was destroyed, occupied and
balkanized. Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Iran face
similar threats, the common thread being dominating
Eurasia through endless conflicts and increased
military spending for war profiteering bounties.
September 11 assured it, and got Michelle Ciarocca of
the Arms Trade Resource Center, in September 2002 to
say:
"The whole mind set of military
spending changed on Sept. 11. The most fundamental
thing about defense spending is that threats drive
(it). It's now going to be easier to fund almost
anything."
Hossein-Zadeh investigated the
growing role of private contractors creating a
"built-in propensity to war that makes the US
military-industrial complex a menace to world peace
and stability, a force of death and destruction," as
virulent under Obama as George Bush.
The fallout includes a burgeoning
national debt, loss of civil liberties and democratic
freedoms, erosion of social services, collapse of the
dollar, America already in decline, its coming loss of
preeminence as a world power, its potential
bankruptcy, perhaps demise in its present form. and
the possibility of WW III.
America's
Illegal Wars of Aggression - The "Supreme Crime"
All US post-WW II conflicts were
premeditated wars of aggression against nations posing
no threat to America - what Justice Robert Jackson at
Nuremberg called:
the "supreme international crime
differing only from other war crimes in that it
contains within itself the accumulated evil of the
whole."
Canadian Law Professor Michael
Mandel explained America's guilt in his superb 2004
book, "How America Gets Away with Murder: Illegal
Wars, Collateral Damage, and Crimes Against Humanity,"
his main theme being Jackson's Nuremberg "supreme
crime" declaration, as relevant now as then.
Tragically, as Edward Herman
observed in reviewing Mandel's book:
"The problem for the United
States (and the world) has been that this country is
now in the business of aggression and its commission
of the "supreme crime" is standard policy, thereby
bringing the "scourge of war" across the globe in
direct violation of the UN charter."
Its Purposes and Principles state
that:
"The Purposes of the United
Nations are:
(1) To maintain international
peace and security, and to that end: to take effective
collective measures for the prevention and removal of
threats to the peace, and for the suppression of acts
of aggression or other breaches of the peace, and to
bring by peaceful means, and in conformity with the
principles of justice and international law,
adjustment or settlement of international disputes or
situations which might lead to a breach of the
peace."
Conspiratorially with NATO and
Israel, America willfully and repeatedly violates
international and US laws, punishes its victims,
absolves itself, and since WW II has directly or
indirectly murdered millions of people globally,
mostly civilian non-combatants.
Barack Obama -
America's New Warrior President
America glorifies conflicts and
the righteousness of waging them, packaged as
liberating ones for democracy, freedom, justice, and
the best of all possible worlds. Obama is just the
latest in a long line of warrior leaders promising
peace by waging war, justifying them by bogus threats,
and calling pacifism unpatriotic to further an
imperial agenda for greater wealth, power, and
unchallengeable global dominance.
In opposition to his announced
Afghanistan surge, peace activists gathered across
from the White House on December 12 for an "Emergency
Anti-Escalation Rally" organized by "End US Wars"- a
new coalition of grassroots anti-war organizations.
Speakers included Kathy Kelly,
David Swanson, Granny D (age 100 on January 24, 2010)
former Senator Mike Gravel (1969 - 1981), and former
Representative and 2008 Green Party presidential
candidate Cynthia McKinney, among others.
This writer was asked to prepare
a short commentary to be read to the crowd. Updated,
it's reproduced below:
Obama's
Permanent War Strategy
Disingenuously calling
Afghanistan a "war of necessity, not choice," Obama
ordered 30,000 more troops deployed over the next six
months with perhaps many more to follow. In one of his
most defining decisions, he's more than doubled the
force count since taking office, angered a majority in
the country, and continues his permanent war agenda
while calling himself a man of peace.
Next target, Yemen, and its
newest, occupied Haiti for plunder, exploitation, and
very likely killing unwanted Haitians by neglect,
starvation, disease, and face-to-face confrontations
if they resist.
As a candidate, Obama campaigned
against imperial militarism, promised limited
escalation only, and pledged to remove all combat
troops from Iraq by August 31, 2010. That was then.
This is now, and consider what he has in mind - the
permanent occupation of Iraq, Afghanistan and more.
Besides the Afghan escalation,
he's also destabilizing Pakistan to balkanize both
countries, weakening them to control the Caspian Sea's
oil and gas riches and their energy routes to secured
ports for export. The strategy includes encircling
Russia, China, and Iran, obstructing their solidarity
and cohesion, defusing a feared geopolitical alliance,
weakening the Iranian government, perhaps attacking
its nuclear sites, eliminating Israel's main regional
rival, and securing unchallenged Eurasian dominance
over this resource rich part of the world that
includes China, Russia, the Middle East, and Indian
subcontinent.
Like George Bush, Obama plans
permanent war and more military spending than all
other nations combined at a time America has no
enemies. He promised change and betrayed us.
Grassroots activism must stop this madness and make
America a nation again to be proud of. The alternative
is too grim to imagine.
Over 50 years ago, Bertrand
Russell (1872 - 1970) warned:
"Shall we put an end to the human
race, or shall mankind renounce war" and live in
peace, because we have no other choice.
Stephen Lendman is a Research
Associate of the Centre for Research on Globalization.
He lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog
site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to
cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on
the Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive
Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central time and
Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs are
archived for easy listening.
http://lendmennews.progressiveradionetwork.org/
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