Body starts to degenerate only
when you reach middle twenties. Your purpose is to procreate,
after that - nature does not care.
I admire the ability to accept those sad facts of life with a
shrug. What does it mean that my body starts to degenerate ONLY when I
reach my middle twenties? I started to live only when I reached
middle twenties. I am actually in the best shape of my life now when I
am 33. Yet I know that is right, biologically. I should have been
in this shape 20 years ago - then by middle twenties I might have
achieved happiness necessary to want to live. Maybe that would then make
me settle and do my life's purpose as you neatly put it. But my life
always sucked and I hated it. I hoped it would change, but it didn't.
When I see those 14 year olds doing 360 misties (a snowboarding term for
something really back-breaking) I can't avoid remembering that
sickness-prone nervous wreck weakling with oil-stained glasses who was
barely able to walk properly at that age. Huhuhu, oh yes, that was me,
of course. I was a prototype of a nerd for whom everybody thought has a
great future of the mad scientist ahead of him. Added to that was that
my best friend was the national champ in ski slalom in Croatia, and he
always got laid, while, obviously, his cartton character pal (me, should
I say) stood there comprehending more and more how much is he screwed.
And, yes, now when I finally reached my 14th year in terms of health,
strength, body abilities and skills, and I do work as a snowboard instructor (I never learned to ride a bike, though), I should start degenerating?
Thanks, buddy. Yup, I know I perhaps would never be able to do 720 spins
and backflips, given that to train this I'd need a flexibility of a
teenager, which despite of my looks and behavior, I lost (flexibility is
the first to go; I just started doing Yoga to prevent this of ruining me
further). I took a scientific approach in preserving my twenties
(vitamins, proteins, dhea, creatine and other stuff). So, I will have fun despite
all odds.
Because what would life be for if not for fun? I need
something to hold on to if I am to accept life. Otherwise, why would I
live? What is the purpose? Aha - to procreate. Well, on Sunday my good
friend Mandy (she made that documentary about rape in Bosnia - Calling
The Ghosts) came to ski at the mountain where I work. We got baked and
she asked me why don't I get married. I said I don't wanna marry - what
for? Well, to have kids - since it is so obvious that you like working
with kids maybe you wouldn't mind having your own. Yup. But the good
news are: I can't have kids. Something's fucked up with my sperm. This
is besides that I do not want the responsibility and hassle of having
kids with my present level of no-income day-to-day scrapping for
survival. True, should I have money, I'd probably go for in-vitro or
even adopt, but since I have no means for my own survival, why should I
force bringing another human being in a such sad world of mine? Wouldn't
that be ultimately irresponsible? And if the nature didn't want it to
happen through natural means, maybe there is a reason. Well, how did I
learn that? For years both in Yugoslavia and here I had a lot of
unprotected sex with various girls - yet nobody ever got pregnant. Here
I had a girlfriend, American, and she, just look at that bitch, secretly
wanted to carry my child, so she dropped her contraception and she would
never let me use a condom (and I did not fight that much against that
decision of hers). We had sex for about 8 months on almost daily basis.
Finally she grew terribly frustrated - but with no apparent reason to me
- and she left me. Three days later she had sex with somebody else. She
was relieved for she got pregnant instantly. Later, when we were passing
through the picket lines shouting "You are delivering your child to
Satan," she told me the whole story. Inside the clinic she answered to
the nurse's question about her business there: "I came to deliver my
child to Satan."
She used to complain to my bickering about the imperfections of an immigrant life in the U.S. saying that American dream is intended to be lived by the second generation, i.e. by those born here, while the immigrants are expected to live hard and work their ass off in order for their kids to prosper. Later, a friend of mine who doesn't give up trying to
find me jobs, called me about the job opening at the Sperm Bank. They
needed healthy young males with reasonable intelligence to come in and
jerk-off. Each jerk-off is paid $50, and you can do it 10 times a month
max. So - this is a $500 additoional monthly income, and it takes you
less than 5 hours a month, i.e. you are effectively paid $100 an hour. I
liked the idea, I went there, filed the forms. Then I was given a small
jar and directed to the room with a comfortable recliner and a library
of XXX rated magazines. Huhuhu, how interesting. I don't get excited at
all just by watching pictures, and I like to jerk-off standing, not
sitting in a recliner. So, I did it, returned the filled jar and they
told me they'd call me in a day or two, to tell me if I was accepted.
When they called they were very polite (assuming, perhaps, that one day
I might be their customer) and they told me that my sperm is no good
(some of it is deformed, some of it is dead, and the environment is a
bit to acidic, was the lab low-down). This doesn't affect my sex life at
all (except that some girls complained about the itchy filling caused by
my sperm - I guess that's the lower pH of my sperm, hee, hee). But the
bottom line is that I can't father kids in a natural way, meaning that I might not have the second generation to cheer, so I refuse to accept the immigrant reality of the American illusion. Instead I am
living my unborn son's life. And I am doing everything to make him love
life. Seeing him happy makes me happy, too. Should I convince my parents
that I am their grandson from now on?
I found out that children that grew
up in the stable environment grew to accept it as LIFE, and then when
they moved on to live alone they had less problems accepting social
realities as LIFE. Children who for some reason rejected their parents
(it can be many reasons - sometimes parents do not even need to divorce
to get rejected by their children), those children when they become
adults they will reject society as well. Of course, this all happens to
various degrees. Like I don't live in some shack in Montana mailing
letter-bombs as Kaczinski did. Once the child loses faith in his/hers
family, in the adult life he/she would never feel comfortable with
society at large. Socialization is done through mutual acceptance:
parents recognize what makes their children tick and they use that as a
guide in their upbringing. But sometimes parents simply have no time to
listen because they are busy chasing the dollar or deutschmark and they
are busy with their own vanity and status. But kids hear and remember
everything. And I am a kid who is blessed (or maybe cursed) with a
particularly good and precise memory.
I was always the
one who did things that others wouldn't. Once in high-school I jumped of
the first floor clasroom window to skip the class just seconds before
the teacher entered (and before I stayed in the doorway so she could see
me walking into the classroom). While working for Radio 101 I actually
stole a $1 million Chinese vase from Mimara museum and made a show about
how their security sucked. Here in the States lacking the trouble, I go
snowboarding and skydiving and surfing and bungee-jumping to re-create
the adrenaline rush that I crave so much. Maybe I'd ski into the tree
once like Sonny Bono, huhuhu.
My life is, although not willingly, of a "Career dissident": the Yugoslav Secret Police took
my pasport away when I was 21, held me in detention, interrogated me
sometimes for 12 hours in the row, followed me around, messed with my
car (you know you drive on the highway and ooops suddenly one of your
wheels wheel off). And before that when I was in high-school I hated
myself and I hated my dad for not being able to comprehend how deeply I
hate myself, so I drunk a lot and sometimes I just didn't come home for
a while, sleeping in Maksimir park and in various doorways in the city. Then
when I started to live alone I also started to write for Polet and
produce shows for Radio 101. Visiting my mom in Germany I befriended Die
Gruenen and Petra Kelly, and took their ideas to Yugoslavia, where I
immediately joined Peace Movement in Slovenia with Jansa, Hren, Bavcar
and co. The police in Zagreb didn't like that, so Radio 101 was forced
to fire me. The rest of my story was that I wrote for Mladina and
Omladinska Iskra and worked on establishing of Svarun (that is now
Anti-War Campaign Croatia). Oh, and the fun part is that the detective
who was heading the department that was interrogating me at the time is
now chief of Tudjman's military police (Mate Lausic).
Communist party in the U.S. is a bunch of stalinist metuzalems,
and btw there are like 40+ communist parties and each numbers like
11 people at average; don't expect them to do anything else but die
soon. Who said that I am looking for ideas that work? I am looking
for like Abby Hoffman type of ideas (remember throwing dollar bills on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange?). Should all New Yorkers decide not to pay the subway fare that would effecticely
render transit cops helpless. Of course the city (or perhaps state
in this case) would in a week come up with the suggestion that
subway would be free from now on but the tax would be added on the
sales tax of other products to cover the cost for running MTA. About
a week later many people would voluntarily brake the anarchic
picket-lines paying the fare under the protection of police.
Serbia's Milosevic's (in Belgrade people actually decided to stop paying the public transportation fare en masse main problem is that he (like Croatia's Tudjman, too) CAN'T rise
any taxes any more: they are all like totally huge.
"Sarma" is ,as we all know, rolls of cabbage stuffed with minced meat.
Now, somebody gets the meat and somebody gets to eat the cabbage.
That's what I think of the "overall tax burden reduction" - which is not
very different between what Clinton did and what Tudjman did (only
Clinton, as usual, had a much better p.r.): even when it filters to the
system it will mostly benefit the rich. You see - down here where I live
in Spanish Harlem - I don't see much of those flashy numbers often
displayed in the U.S. business journals about the unstoppable economic
growth and eight years of bull market. People are poor. The social
security office is overcrowded. They sell dope in the streets to
supplement their meager minimum wage checks. Houses are in bad
condition. Walls collapse. I have no reason to belive that Tudjman will
do any better out of initially weaker economy.
Without unnecessary taxation the
exporting corporations would end up with more profits. Those profits may
be invested in new jobs, or may not. New jobs may be the desired
decently paid ones, or they may be dead end minimum wage shitty ones. If
the first is the case - the society will become on average more affluent
(larger middle class) which would compensate the basic food price
increases due to taxation (Croatia's VAT). In the opposite case the gap between rich and
poor would widen and a social discontent may result. Of course, the
government cannot solely be blamed for that. As it is very often
stressed by Clinton's government here: corporations have responsibility
to society, too. People who are workers 9-5 are consumers 5-10: if they
are underpaid as workers they will be underspent as consumers. The
society as a whole benefits from higher wages being paid to the great
majority of employable citizens. But I am not sure that Croatian upstart
export companies built by greedy individuals very alike to the "robber
barons" of the earlier days of American capitalism, understand that
equation.
I know many corporations here in the U.S. which do not understand that equation either, so to cut cost they move businesses to various countries that offer cheap labour. All sneakers that I have were made in China (yet they are Nike and Adidas). My snowboard gloves were made in Sri Lanka - it never snows there, so I wonder what the women who sew my gloves thought the white men need them for. And I know many on the workforce who are not
satisfied with the hefty bonuses the executives distribute among
themselves each year. Of the $100 price for the dress that sells in some of the large retail chains like Wal-Mart (which doesn't sell Marylin Manson, but DOES sell guns), the workers who actually made the dress get $6. So, why don't we move executives from the U.S. to let's say
Croatia? Because the executives are the ones who do the moving, and
workforce is being moved. Look, over 200 people on Wall Street on
Christmass '97 collected bonuses in excess of $2 millions! Now, this is
something that the "workforce" people and their families don't see over
three generations of full time employment - and some stuffed suit
("institutional broker") takes this home in one year. What can it be
that he has done so much more valuable for the humankind than the rest
of us mere mortals to be awarded with such a large prize?
It is the responsibility for large sums of other people's money that they are paid for.
But I don't need anybody to be RESPONSIBLE for me and CONTROL
my money - and on top of that get paid a nice premium for doing that.
I'd be quite comfortable without any of that. So, I refuse to accept it
and I write about it. I warn the system to leave me alone. In return I
pledge peaceful co-existence. But, please, do not mess with me, because
if I am angry I don't care what would happen to me while acomplishing a
mission.
So far, this position worked fine for me.
A corporation is just one of many,
and they all together make a humankind, don't they? So, by paying
somebody extra for the benefit he created for a company, not for the
benefit he did for the humankind establishes the rule of greater value
of particular over universal, which is contrary to math laws. Therefore,
our way of life is inherently doomed.
Consumers are the key word. And they are so far the only effective way to protest the overseas sweathops: boycott the barnd. Now, for that we need qualified consumers - somebody like studenst, who come from relative affluence and who still can afford to be seen in a sit-in. Therefore we got the United Students Against Sweatshops. This largest recent wave of student activism aims primarily to ban the clothing companies that do not pay their workers (wherever they are) a living wage from using campus logos. Students gathered support of many universities staff for their ideas and the industry is now on defensive. But once they "grow up", get a "real job" and families of their own this is going to evaporate - their employers even may include some gag rule about that in the contract. On the other hand, the unemployed and minimum
wage paid laborers are awful consumers. So, they are better kept in
prisons, as New York state just gathered. Extending of immense household
credit to American citizens was done in order to build consumers out of
underpaid workers. But how long can the U.S. banks give out credit
cards? The interest rates are sky high - but so is the number of
defaults and bankruptcy filings. People don't pay the debt. Banks are
covered by insurance. Insurance is paid by the corporations. Which then
pay less its workforce. Therefore it makes perfect sense to go in debt
and then go bankrupt.
Some other sucker will
pay for my default. However, in the case of MASSIVE default (there were
more than 1 million personal bankruptcies in 1997, the U.S. citizen on
average owes $7000 and the total US household debt exceeded the GNP of
Great Britain) - nobody really yet knows what would happen. As for
getting blacklisted, I am used to that. Citibank almost failed by overextending itself with bad
loans to South American dictatorships. Then they gave Gen-Xers like me
plenty of credit cards five years ago. Those cards came with 19.8%
annual percentage rate on average. Correctly, they hoped that many of us
would eventually land well paid jobs or open our own businissess and
then keep theam afloat for about ten years paying off our debts. That
actually happened and my case of default is perhaps just a
pre-calculated loss.
Of course, somebody who grew up in a little village in
China without a telephone, may have a different perspective on life than
somebody who grew up in an American suburbian household with cable TV
and Internet. Basically the KNOWLEDGE is the key. If everybody would
have a knowledge of what a certain job should be paid and what rewards
should it yield, then this would not be possible. Capital became
international - yet labour remained confined to its national borders:
and governments even stress the national stuff (patriotic values and
other horseshit) very loudly to its lower classes, while rich take none
of this really seriously. Marx failed at predicting the unified world
workforce against particularized capitalist economies of nation-states.
It happened exactly the opposite way: we have particularized nation-state workforce
against the multinational corporations who freely move capital to the
nation-state that is able to offer lower labour cost at the higher level
of social peace and consumer confidence. Now there is a trick here: this
is not that easy to achieve. Corporate capitalism wants also to sell its
products - so the underpaid workers have to be able to buy stuff and
still they have to "know their place", i.e. not to rebel if they can't
buy all the gadgets.
Places like China are PERFECT. It is a huge market.
And the population is for centuries trained to be docile and content.
But what would the world do with the excessive labor force in the
western world then? I'll tell you what they are ALREADY doing here - and
what is not a perfect prescription for future social peace - the largest
growth industry in New York state is building PRISONS. Upstate every
month there is a new prison opened. So, that the unemployed upstate
white trash can get jobs as guards. Of course, then they need prisoners. That's why they invented mandatory minimums. Now, each particular felony charge carries a particular mandatory punishment, reducing the role of the judge to a rubber-stamp approval of the prosecutorial decision. The possibility of putting more people in prison gives prosecutors an incentive to try more cases and it gives police the incentive to arrest more people. It also gives prosecutors powers unforseen by the Constitution: he can strike deals with arrested people to lessen their charges (i.e. to shorten their mandatory time in jail) in exchange for them snitching upon others. The particularly nauseating part is that some prosecutors actually encourage perjury in effort to obatin even more convictions on their prosecutorial record, and their power is left unchecked by the justice system of this country. This is not what America should be about.
Prisoners are then collected (mostly among colored minorities) in inner
city slums of New York City, where mayor Giuliani is just bringing MORE
cops (the police presence around where I live is already more pronounced
than it EVER was in former Yugoslavia). Arrests are done increasingly
for non-violent offenses - because there is a DROP in real crime-rate in
New York: people go in prison for possession of marijuana (mandatory), speeding,
driving intoxicated, grafitti spraying, jaywalking, public nuisance,
dubious frauds, but mostly because they are unemployed or poor. On Howard Stern show (August 1999) there was a short notice how some kids beat up other kid because he did not want to give up his cell phone. Stealing a cell phone is stupid, useless crime, of course. But how would a teenager know that? He is brought up in the society where every billboard screams at you that you NEED to HAVE certain things to be considered worth living. And then sometimes you can't have them, and you can't understand that - why some kids can have and you can't have them? You don't wanna be worse than others. You don't wanna feel that way. So, you steal them. That's the first reasonably natural impulse, isn't it? So, you end up in jail. The New York
state employs the upstate poor white as guards and the city poor blacks
and hispanics as prisoners.
I say "employs", because the new prisons are going to be
PROFITABLE. No more life of idle work-outs and bad television: the
prisons are going to produce stuff - bags, gloves, etc. - prisoners are
paid some silly wage that reminds of what workers are paid in Indonesia, and
the product is sold in the open market. Not only that the problem of
unemployment is solved, but also products Made in U.S. are again
competitive because of reduced labour costs. This, of course, force the workforce to work for lower wages or be unemployed and poor, forcing them into crime. In South Georgia a recycling plant laid off 50 workers. 35 of 50 took that job to get off welfare. Now they are back on welfare. The workers were replaced with cheaper prison laborers. What is the message? If you want a job, you have to comit a crime and you'll get to work as a prisoner for the fraction of the livable wage, so that fat cats of the U.S. can get even fatter. In 1891, when the Tennessee Coal Company locked out all of its union workers for them refusing to renounce their union membership, replacing them with convicts, the mine workers stormed the prison, released the convicts and burned the prison to the ground. This "legal" action led the State to discontinue the practice of hiring out inmates. In the past 100 years however the State acquired much more power over the People in the U.S. and such an action today, unfortunately, is not possible. Today prisoners are hired by TWA (they book flights), Microsoft (they pack Windows software, how unsurprising), AT&T (telemarketing), Honda (manufacturing), Toys'R'Us (cleaning and stocking), and money managers like Allstate, Merrill Lynch and Shearson Lehman are investing in prospects of private prisons. Soon, perhaps the prison stocks will become the new hot item on the Wall Street.
Is the U.S. actually taking
cues from China? Or is it vice versa? This is slave labour! And the methods of coercion are
the same. In China's slave labour prisons the stun guns (high voltage
battons) were introduced as soon as China opened to the West: the stun
gun technology was the FIRST thing Chinese government imported and
copied! The so-called less-lethal weapons are a best-seller in the U.S., too:
the newest in the market is a $600 REACT stun-belt - prisoners wear the
belt and the guard holds the remote control. At any time guard may
punish the prisoner with the release of high voltage electricity from
the belt which would in 8 seconds reduce the prisoner to the pile of
jello on the floor that shitted his pants. Yet, China, with five-fold U.S. population, the largest totalitarian state in history, often cited for its human rights abuses, still has a half-million prisoners LESS than the U.S., the world's preeminent democracy, that so much loves to educate the Chinese and others on human rights practices. The U.S. has 7 times more prisoners per capita than China: 2 million by the end of 1999, nearly 1% of total population. How possibly can that happen in the so-called free world? With bad laws passed by the lobbyists of the rich since 1980: mandatory minimums, three strikes (that put minor offenders in prison for life), anti-drug abuse act (that doubled the federal prison population in six years). Since 1980, annual state spending on corrections went from $4.2B up to $19B, and California's (the first state to introduce "three strikes") backlog of arrest warrants (the number of arrests that have not been made for there's no room in the jails) now stands at 2.6 million - larger than the entire American prisoner population.
Today, the U.S. incarcerates seven times more people per capita than its main rival - communist China. A sharp increase in the incarceration rate in past two decades - prison population had grown 80% in the last decade (NYT, 11/02/03
I will never understand why Marx put capitalism vs.
communism believing that they are both "systems of ideas." Bad Hegel
influence. Hegel was one who believed that the "burgeois" society was
the ultimate achievement of mankind, and Marx disputed that on the basis
of social injustices in early laisezz-fair capitalism. Marx understood
that "capitalism" as a principle exists in all "systems" (slavery,
feudalism, etc.). The "capitalist" laws are plain economic laws.
Fighting them would be like fighting gravity. I used to write that
Communists remind me of people who want to run a river up the mountain,
and when the river refuses, they organize demonstrations against the
river, shout at it, beat the shit out of it, and when the river still
refuses, they build dams higher and higher to make the river behave
acording to their decrees. One day the dams will burst, I wrote. And
they did. But what Marx wanted is a class-less society. None of the
communist states ever even considered such a nonsense. Party bosses were
a class - very similar to the corporate executives in "capitalism" -
communism in Russia and in Yugoslavia (or in China) was just a variation of capitalism
- economy behaved in the framework of the same rules. Communists just
took the monopoly and banned others from competing against them and then
shielded themselves behind the thick veils of ideological doublespeak
from their dumb followers. Yes, the social services were better than in
the U.S. - but they were not better than in Sweden, and Sweden was never
a communist country. Nor is Sweden ideal, either. The classless society would require much more than
just a simple change of government - people have to change. The level of
education of citizens, the environmental consciousness, the cultural set
of values, the technological level of production - all that plays a role
in achieving the classless society. Revolutions are actually a setback -
what an irony, hahaha. As the society is more developed and people
better educated and environmentally conscious the idea of clasless
society would be more acceptable to them. Marx's biggest, yet so obvious
mistake, was to believe that it is possible to FORCE people to live in a
classless society. If you need to FORCE people to do anything, you would
obviously need a class of enforcers, and there goes your classless
society dream.
If you come up with something that you think
it is a good idea - it is your duty to spread it through the world. If
there is interest in your idea, other people would catch on and the idea
will become a reality. If you don't do that - a good idea might be
wasted. The only thing not permitted is to FORCE people to accept your
idea.
Footnotes:
Croatian government announced reduction of income taxes, as well. That remains to be seen - that somebody in the post-communist
world reduces income taxes. That's the key American advantage over the
rest of western economies: ability to pay its government bureaucracy
with dirt low income taxes. But it is very difficult to introduce that
system in a small country with a small work force - you see the
government of any country is relatively of the same size - or you have
to CUT IT, like maybe a small country does not need embassies in every
corner of the world. There are also downsides to this system: other
western economies have much better social services than the U.S. (health
care, continuous education, welfare, pension plans, etc.) because they
can pay it from higher income tax. In the U.S. if you get seriously sick
while you are young and without a settled corporate job - you are
FUCKED. But you hope and pray that would not happen (because it is
statistically rare). Then people take this for normal - because they are
brought up to believe that their cherished freedom will come with some
inconveniences - I don't know if this will be the same in countries
where people are used to be watched over from their craddle to their
grave. Finally, in the immensely greedy form of American corporate
capitalism, the boosting employment (more than 40% of employees younger
than 35 work PART-TIME with no benefits or job-security) and reduced
labour costs often cut beyond the fat: the non-union blue collar work is
AFTER-TAXES paid LESS than anywhere in the industrialized, civilised
world.
Crime problem? US? Not really. No more than any other country. It is just that
media make spectacle of it here. America, compared to the Western-European capitalist democracies, looks a bit dishoveled,
which is a direct consequence of the lax state control, and more
people own guns than anywhere in Europe, but the levels of crime are
statistically not much different than anywhere else. Still, we have
largest per capita prisoner population of any developed country in the world and many
states implement dead penalty, Texas executes more people in a year than
all European states combined and has more people on the death row than
all countries of former Soviet Union combined. In a way the state of
human rights in the U.S. is comparable to Croatia, so therefore the
remark of the Croatia's government member (Ljerka Mintas-Hodak) although
ridiculed by the embassy was taken quite seriously by the State
Department and by the human-rights watching no-governmental
organizations, and State Department will have to make a human rights
report on the U.S. state of human rights this year for the first time.
And if you are rich you might not even go to prison, but be just held
liable for civil penalty even for killing - like O.J. who is charged
$12.5 millions for killing his wife and her lover. I, on the other hand, am going to prison for 4 days because I can't pay $80 for a speeding ticket. Each $20 equals a day in prison, the court clerk explained to me (Allamuchy county in New jersey). By that count O.J. would spend 1712 years and 120 days in prison if he could not pay the fine. Equal justice for all?
More than a third of the U.S. budget is spent to satisfy past military debt incured by the cold war stupidity. The so-called detente was actually a war of exhaustion. Soviet Union got their economy exhausted first and they lost the war. The U.S. won - but at a very high price. The U.S.(mostly through IMF), also, gave away money, plenty
of money, and now the Uncle Sam goes around with the "you owe me"
story from one country to the another - and all of those countries are
corrupted little dictatorships where a lot of that money leaked to the
pockets of officials (and stayed there). Indonesia is the most corrupt
country in the world (according to Financial Times). They got the money
and technology from GM to build American cars and then they built a
factory in which they decided to build their own national brand car
under the Korean license. GM was furious. First the Korean factory was
bancrupted and divided (torn apart) between Japanese and European
creditors. Then Indonesian car factory was left to die without parts,
and then they were asked to pay back on their loans. They couldn't. I
feel sorry for the people not for the government. Yugoslavia was not
that corrupt like Indonesia, but it was heading there. Actually
Yugoslavia did something interesting in the last ten years of Tito's
rule: it cashed on its unique geopolitical strategic position in the
cold war framework by taking more and more money from the West. Then,
Tito died without a clear successor (Suharto has none, either). By the end of eighties republics
were having a cold war between them in a struggle between their
political leaders for the ultimate power. Yugoslavia became a weak,
divided, easy prey. On top of that Berlin Wall was torn down, Soviet
Union dissipated and Russia became a U.S. dependent from an enemy. There was no
more cold war logic. Yugoslavia lost its strategic position which was
oblivious to its politicians near-sightedly concentrated on their court
battles. Milosevic perhaps believed that he actually will start the WW
III with his nasty little dirty war. But he hasn't. The prized
Tito's heartland of Yugoslavia - Bosnia (in the old Yugoslav military
doctrine Bosnia was the place from which the rest of Yugoslavia would be
defended in the case of either NATO or Warszaw pact attack, and 60% of
military forces were stationed there) is now virtually a NATO
protectorate, Serbs are cleansed from Croatian Krajina, Kosovo is for all practical purposes ruled by the KLA and Serbia is set back 50 years by NATO aerial bombing. The U.S. did the same under Reagan: they
cashed in on their obvious invincibility by taking money from the rest
of the world. Now, when it is the time to pay, they, instead of paying,
try to prove the rest of the world their ultimate usefulness to the rest
of the world, so that the other industrial nations would not force them
to go belly up: therefore we have a continuous presence of Saddam Hussein
and his anthrax spores as a threat that can be dealt away ONLY by use of
American cruise missiles and stealth fighters armed with smart
fire-and-forget gps guided bombs. And we have Slobodan Milosevic to keep Europe grateful for American military might. How long this story will you think
hold up? When Iran was "bad" they armed Saddam - now when Iraq is "bad"
they encourage opening relations with mullahs. That's ok. Scare tactics
and diplomacy are far better than open warfare and I commend Clinton on
that, but HOW LONG WILL THIS ALL HOLD UP? All of this falls
appart when guys with names like Mike get nuts, load their shotgun, sit
in their pick-up trucks and take a long ride inside the beltway.
On Life
On globalization of communism