Saturday, September 15, 2012

Why aren't they grateful?

Another sobering read from Glenn Greenwald, at his new digs at the Guardian, on why it's baffling that Americans can't understand why Mid-Eastern Muslims in Egypt and Libya and other places aren't "grateful" to us:

But to act as though Muslim anger toward the US and Israel is primarily the by-product of crazy conspiracy theories is itself a crazy conspiracy theory. It's in the world of reality, not conspiracy, where the US and Israel have continuously brought extreme amounts of violence to the Muslim world, routinely killing their innocent men, women and children. Listening to Engel, one would never know about tiny little matters like the bombing of Gaza and Lebanon, the almost five-decade long oppression of Palestinians, the widely hated, child-killing drone campaign, or the attack on Iraq.

And it's in the world of reality, not conspiracy, where the US really has continuously interfered in their countries' governance by propping up and supporting their dictators. Intense Muslim animosity toward the US, including in Egypt, long pre-dates this film, and the reasons aren't hard to discern. That's precisely why the US supported tyranny in these countries for so long: to ensure that the citizens' views, so contrary to US policy, would be suppressed and rendered irrelevant.

It doesn't take a propagandized populace to be angry at the US for such actions. It takes a propagandized populace to be shocked at that anger and to view it with bafflement and resentment on the ground that they should, instead, be grateful because we "freed" them.

Indeed.

Murderous rioting is never right - it is in fact a horrible wrong - but pretending it comes out of the blue, or that a horrible movie is more than a spark to long- and well-laid tinder, just invites another one in another while.

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