Published on Tuesday, January 07, 2020
by Andrew Bacevich in TomDispatch
photo above caption: But really… what has the U.S. accomplished over the last thirty years?
WN: This article by a premier researcher/historian is as usual superb–and the answer to the title, poignantly tragic. What elder Bush stated is part of the (probably) greatest sustained con job–for over 400 years and counting–the world has seen. In the words of an (at times) colourful commentator (me):
And to think that after all these centuries, most Americans actually do still believe this shit!
Note the excerpted beginning of this powerful article–and read the rest when you can.
excerpt:
Thirty years ago this month, President George H.W. Bush appeared before a joint session of Congress to deliver his first State of the Union Address, the first post-Cold War observance of this annual ritual. Just weeks before, the Berlin Wall had fallen. That event, the president declared, “marks the beginning of a new era in the world’s affairs.” The Cold War, that “long twilight struggle” (as President John F. Kennedy so famously described it), had just come to an abrupt end. A new day was dawning. President Bush seized the opportunity to explain just what that dawning signified.
“There are singular moments in history, dates that divide all that goes before from all that comes after,” the president said. The end of World War II had been just such a moment. In the decades that followed, 1945 provided “the common frame of reference, the compass points of the postwar era we’ve relied upon to understand ourselves.” Yet the hopeful developments of the year just concluded — Bush referred to them collectively as “the Revolution of ’89” — had initiated “a new era in the world’s affairs.”
While many things were certain to change, the president felt sure that one element of continuity would persist: the United States would determine history’s onward course. “America, not just the nation but an idea,” he emphasized, is and was sure to remain “alive in the minds of people everywhere.”
“As this new world takes shape, America stands at the center of a widening circle of freedom — today, tomorrow, and into the next century. Our nation is the enduring dream of every immigrant who ever set foot on these shores and the millions still struggling to be free. This nation, this idea called America, was and always will be a new world — our new world.”
Please click on: Most Americans Still Believe This Shit!