Friends,
Herb chided me, saying in part, ""Dr Science" has shown the venom
he has for some operatives
who have either put forth unacceptable (unscientific or untrue)
concepts or associated themselves with corporate capitalism or other
unsavory behaviors etc,. Now will he show the readers of the article
whose author he condemns what is untrue about it."
I had inferred that Herb meant I had shown venom towards Michael
Balter, which I assured him and Michael was not the case, and Herb
replied (all in private, though not secret) notes that I was the one
who made the wrong inference, and that "The venom of which i wrote is
the venom you expressed about E. O.
Wilson and the other creeps, not Michael." I'm not sure I vented venom
against either E.O. Wilson or Norman Borlaug, both credible and
accomplished scientists, but against the promostion of their work for
the benefit of the Ruling Class by ruling class institutions. And the
word "creep", which Herb incorrectly implies I used to characterize
E.O. Wilson, I used only sarcastically in saying, "creeps like Rachel
Carson who was crabbing about the Silent Spring without the songs of
birds, allegedly because the insects they ate were overdosed on DDT,
got dumped on [by ruling class media]." But who's interested in Herb
and me quibbling? I haven't had a chance to write a reply to Herb and
Michael yet, but I just got an e-mail from Greg Palast and I thought
I'd share with you some real venom, in which Palast mentions two
important books (neither of which I read or intend to read, because I
already know we must get rid of capitalism). Here it is. Enjoy
the venom!
Subject: John Perkins: Jerk, Con-man, Shill
From: Greg Palast <[log in to unmask]>
Date: Thu, 5 Jul 2007 17:48:22 -0400
To: [log in to unmask]
John Perkins: Jerk, Con-man, Shill
by Greg Palast
5 July 2007
I remember John Perkins. He was a
real jerk. A gold-plated, super-slick lying little butthole shill for
corporate gangsters; a
snake-oil salesman with a movie-star grin, shiny loafers, a crooked
calculator and a tooled leather
briefcase full of high-blown bullshit.
This was two decades ago. The early 1980s. I wore sandals, uncombed
hair down to my
cheap collar and carried a busted ring-binder filled with honest
calculations and sincere
analysis. It was Economic Hit Man Perkins vs. Economic Long-Hair
Palast. I didn't stand
a chance. The EHM was about to put a political bullet hole through me
wider than a silver
dollar.
Hit Men have "clients." Perkins' was a giant power company, Public
Service
of New Hampshire. PSNH was trying to sell New England lobstermen and
potato farmers on the
idea that they desperately needed a multi-billion dollar nuclear
plant. The fact that this
bloated atomic water kettle, called "Seabrook," would produce enough
electricity for
everyone in the Granite State to smelt iron didn't matter. That the
beast could add a
surcharge to electric bills equal to home mortgages was simply smiled
over by Perkins and his team
of economic con artists.
To steal millions, you need a top team of armed robbers. But to steal
billions, you
need PhD's with color charts and economic projections made of fairy
dust and eye of newt.
Perkins had it all - including a magical thing called a
computer-generated spreadsheet (this was
well before Excel).
I was an expert witness for some consumer groups, trying to explain to
state officials that
Perkins' numbers were bogus as a bubble-gum bagel and his financial
projections were from some New
Hampshire on another planet.
But this was the key point: Perkins slept in a suite at the Omni. I
had
truck-rumble insomnia at the motel off exit 68. He glared and grinned
and glad-handed. I
tried to keep my eyes open.
Here's how it ended. The local Joe's jumped head-first into the
Perkins fantasy and
bought his client's power plant boondoggle. Within a couple years, the
local electric
companies had all gone bankrupt, the state treasury was drained,
electric bills went from lowest to
highest in the nation causing factories to close and dump, I figure,
about 11,000 jobs.
Perkins' clients walked away with barrelfuls of billions.
And Dr. Perkins pocketed plenty for his mortal soul.
But, as in every moral tale, Perkins, the modern Dr. Faust, found
redemption in
confession.
And we're lucky he did. Because, in Perkins', "Confessions of an
Economic Hit
Man," and his latest, the just-released "Secret History of
the American
Empire," we find out what makes these guys tick. By "these guys"
I mean
the vultures [there's real venom!] who suck up development aide,
the sharks who use the World Bank as their enforcers, the
corporate marauders, power pirates and hedge fund hogs with their
snouts in the economic trough.
In "Secret History," Perkins, from the inside, gives the details of the
weird
moral emptiness and pitilessness of men who waylay the riches of the
planet from the people to whom
it rightly belongs.
In New England, the pain imposed by the clients of the economic hit men
were financial; but,
as Perkins wants us never to forget, in much of the planet, the slick
sales pitch of the economic
hit man is enforced by squads of hit men with less subtle weaponry.
Perkins writes:
"Three men toting AK-47s stood at attention outside. They saluted
as we drove
past. One of the three opened the front door opposite the driver.
Leather Jacket and I
climbed in. He spoke into a walkie talkie. Tinted windows made it
impossible to see
inside."
In lines heavy with Hemingway, Perkins takes us to Indonesia, Bolivia,
even tiny Diego
Garcia and other victim-states where doctorate-armed "consultants" put
an academic gloss
on militarized plunder.
In the story of the guys with the AKs, Perkins is on assignment in
Guatemala for an outfit
called SWEC, a Bechtel twin trying to foist another mad power plant
horror show on the natives of
Guatemala. (About the same time, I convinced the state of New York to
bring racketeering
charges against SWEC and its partners in a massive power plant building
fraud. SWEC and
co-defendants settled the civil charges for a payment of nearly half a
billion dollars.)
Unlike the yokels of New Hampshire who fell for the smooth Perkins
line, the Guatemalans
were no pushovers. Skeptical locals, suspicious indigenous shamans and
a couple of improbably
courageous politicians simply wouldn't roll over to the corporate
conquistadores.
The resisters, we are led to presume, will be dealt with accordingly.
As Perkins
explains it, if his pie-charts don't make the sale, the little men in
his darkened car know a little
explosive wired to an ignition could be persuasive.
However, by time he got to Central America on the corporate assignment,
Perkins was already
ill at heart with the SWECs of this world. Ultimately, he refused to
back their destructive
scheme.
Perkins had switched sides - and, in Confessions of an Economic Hit
Man gets his
soul back from Satan only a little soiled. In Secret History, the
personal confession turns
into an illuminating, world-spanning jeremiad. From Latin America to
Africa to the Middle
East, Perkins leaps from his own story to the widespread caused by the
greed armies sent marching
from the boardrooms of New York and London.
Today, Perkins is my confrere and colleague. He wears his hair longish
and I wear mine
. . . well, I've stopped wearing hair altogether.
And in his writings today, Perkins heart goes out to the Third World
targets of this new
empire ruled by shock troops and spread sheets. His empathy extends to
those in the occupied
territory known as the USA. Because, says Perkins, when the wretchedly
ripped-off of the Earth
rise in rebellion, the lash of the backlash is felt by the children of
the lobstermen of New
Hampshire, shivering under Humvees in Falluja, and never the EHM's
clients' fortunate sons,
frolicking in their Ferraris.
***********
Greg Palast is the author of Armed Madhouse: From Baghdad to New
Orleans - Sordid
Secrets and Strange Tales of a White House Gone Wild.
To read an except from Perkins' latest book, The Secret History of
the American
Empire, go to
http://www.gregpalast.com/the-secret-history-of-the-american-empire-excerpt/