By Alan
Caruba
I have
been puzzling over what I perceive as the growing loss of public interest in the
Benghazi debacle in which an American ambassador and three others lost their
lives and the former Secretary of State in a pique of anger over questions about
the event said, “What difference does it make?”
It
makes a difference if the State Department was derelict or indifferent to the
ambassador’s cables that spelled out the security threats that he and his
staffed faced or, for that matter, the attacks on other diplomats and
humanitarian organizations operating in what was a war zone. African migrant
workers had earlier been attacked creating an evacuation crisis, but the
September 11, 2012—a noteworthy anniversary—attack simply accelerated the flight
from a lawless region controlled by al Qaeda.
It
makes a difference if, as we have since learned, the President was entirely
detached from the crisis of the attack in Benghazi after initially been informed
of it. No one, it seemed, took any action despite the six hours of the attack
though it was reportedly seen in real time via satellite drone
surveillance.
It
makes a difference if the White House, in concert with the State Department,
concocted a story that made no mention of al Qaeda, said the attack on the
anniversary of 9/11 was “spontaneous”, and was the result of a video that no one
had seen.
Now,
six months later, with the exception of Fox News, there is little notice taken
of what is arguably a major scandal, one of incompetence followed by deception,
and which, like “Fast and Furious”, the gun-running scandal to Mexican drug
cartels dreamed up and covered up in the Department of Justice, is fading not
just from the news, but from the memories of Americans.
My
theory is that the cabal in the White House, led by the President, knows well
that all they have to do is stall long enough and the initial outrage will go
away, if it hasn’t already. Even the Congressional committees and their
inquiries will lose momentum. The public is asking “What next?” instead of “What
happened?”
Complicating this are the hearings on
the President’s choices for cabinet posts. Former Senator John Kerry sailed
through to his appointment as the new Secretary of State, but others like former
Senator Chuck Hagel as the next Secretary of Defense and John Brennan as the
next Director of the Central Intelligence Agency are foundering briefly over
concerns that the former is an incompetent, bigoted fool and the latter may be
an Islamic “mole”.
The
public, meanwhile, is distracted over the prospect of “sequestration”, blames
the Republicans when in fact it was a proposal made by the President to
force Congress to address the growing national debt and annual deficit. As he
said during a 2008 election debate, he was sure it would be derailed by some
kind of agreement.
His
failure or refusal to come to any agreement regarding spending cuts, however,
ensures that sequestration will become the law of the land. His outlandish lies
about the shutdown of vast elements of the government are ludicrous. They are a
part of the way the Obama administration rules from crisis to crisis, spreading
widespread fear among Americans.
There
are plenty of other distractions as the 24/7 news cycle provides coverage of
every new crisis somewhere in the world and here at home of dramatic weather
events, fires, murders, sports, and the usual celebrity blather.
I often
include references to history when I write, but I have begun to conclude that
only the older portion of my readers have any real grasp of those events to
which I refer. I am inclined to believe that many under age fifty and many more
under thirty have no real grasp of U.S. or world history. Even Vietnam and
Watergate are “ancient” history to most as is the Civil Rights movement of the
1960s.
It is
already twelve years since 9/11 in 2001. In that time, our military has been
bogged down in Afghanistan and fought a war in Iraq to no effect other than
deposing its former dictator, Saddam Hussein. That war, however, may have
encouraged the citizens in Tunisia, Libya, and Egypt to force out their
dictators, but lacking any experience with democracy, they have only exchanged
the former dictators for new ones, often allied with the Muslim Brotherhood.
Syria is two years into a civil war with 70,000 dead.
I
have begun to suspect that the advent of the Internet and the way news is now
swiftly packaged and presented has left too many, but particularly the young,
living entirely in the present with neither knowledge, nor interest in the
past—even the recent past.
With
our blogs and our ability to comment on everything as it occurs on Facebook or
via Twitter, we are suspicious of the “experts”—people who may actually have the
knowledge and experience to comment in a cogent, informed fashion—because we
know what we “feel” even if we do not know what we do not
know!
Too
many of those experts come with an agenda that is intended to keep us frightened
and compliant.
That is
why this White House feels confident it can tell us the same lies over and over
again, secure in the knowledge that we will only remember them, however briefly,
and then move on to whatever the latest, the present news may be.
We are developing the memory and attention span of fungus.
We are developing the memory and attention span of fungus.
That
changes our relationship with the White House, Congress, the arcane workings of
the Federal Reserve, the dizzying ups and downs of Wall Street, the imponderable
fact that so many millions of our countrymen are unemployed, and that news of
the latest Northeastern blizzard has already replaced the devastation of
Hurricane Sandy in October 2012.
“We are
the people we have been waiting for,” President Obama said during his 2008
campaign. I hope not. The sheer novelty of electing the first black President
was sufficient to get him elected. That was just over four years ago and the
novelty is gone. All that remains are the lies and an economy in disrepair.
The
reality of Obamacare and other elements of the President’s agenda are beginning
to bite, but the bulk of Americans are now conditioned to live in the present,
ignore even the recent past, and regard the future as chaos. They only know what
is occurring to themselves today. Who can or even will plan for the future when
you have credit cards?
© Alan
Caruba, 2013
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