Malik Nidal Hasan hadn’t yet been deployed, but as a shrink for traumatic stress at the Bethesda Naval Facility, he was undoubtedly familiar with some of the horrors his fellow soldiers live in Iraq and Afghanistan.

MORE THE MERRIER
Malik went off in Fort Hood on Thursday, opening fire with handguns on about 300 soldiers in line for checkups at a medical center on base. He was still alive Friday.
Reports have as many as 13 dead and 31 wounded. Base commander Lt. Gen. Robert Cone called it “counterintuitive” that so many bullets came from one shooter and two handguns. It is theorized that some were victims of friendly fire in the on-base firefight between US soldiers.
Accounts portray a mayhem of confusion in close quarters, with multiple armed participants.
This is exactly what U.S. arms manufacturers want. The more “mayhem” with ” multiple armed participants” – the more profits they can rake in. It’s OK in Iraq and Aghanistan, Africa and South America, but it’s a bit tougher sell when it hits on U.S. soil.
Violence has been erupting on U.S. soil and it will not abate. This massacre is not indicative of just one ” individual who took it upon himself”- as Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano says. It is a symbol of the U.S. culture of war profiteering. This is exactly the type of event that is expected to occur in war profiteering: weapons are used and death and destruction ensue. Simple cause and effect. The problem here – at least from a war profiteer’s perspective – is that it happened on a U.S. base in America. That is obviously not the ideal press release for a weapons manufacturer.
But no worries. The good folks at Lockheed, Northrop, Bechtel, GA, GD, GE, Boeing, et al, are at it 24-7-365. Their profits depend on massacres like these. Not so much because of the hardware used here- it wasn’t much. But the culture of war profiteering depends on breeding the culture of war, and massacres like these serve just that.
So while all seems well in the world of weapons and war, the same can’t be said for the victims of Fort Hood and the 58 separate school shooting incidents since 1996, not to mention the over 5,000 American and over 60,000 civilian casualties of Iraq and Afghanistan. News reports are coming in even as this is written that a former employee has opened fire in an office building in Orlando.
In war profiteering, massacres of innocent civilians and the costly press campaigns they inspire are chalked up as overhead in a high-cost, high-reward business. But it’s nothing that a good days’ worth of American – procured Afghani opium can’t pay for – one of the many benefits of war-profiteer diversification.
The winds-o-war are a-blowin’, and not just close to home- they are blowing at home.
This entry was posted on Friday, November 6th, 2009 at 8:04 pm and is filed under news commentary. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

