The connection of George W. Bush with a quote by Hermann Goering on
stampeding the general population into an unjustified war has earned some
strident criticism for Democratic Washington Congressman Jim McDermott.
Actually, as military minds, Bush and Goering have some similarities
and differences. Both had substance-abuse problems--Goering's was heroin,
Bush's alcohol and cocaine (according to press reports). Both have/had a
tendency to put all their faith in grandiose, but poorly-thought-out
military plans. Both were fighter pilots are inherent risk takers.
Unlike Bush, Goering actually saw combat and was truly
heroic--shooting down 22 Allied airplanes as commander of the famous
Richthofen Air Squadron in the First World War. George W. Bush served in a
near-mothballed Air National Guard wing, and reportedly failed to show up
for duty after transfer from Texas to Alabama.
Aside from allowing the British to evacuate their troops from Dunkirk
(he convinced Hitler that air power could win the battle without the need
for a standard infantry operation), Goering's biggest military disaster was
the shifting of Luftwaffe attacks from British fighter squadrons (which were
near collapse) and factories to civilian population centers, such as London.
Goering is reported to have stated to Germans uneasy about waging war on
civilians that: "If one British bomb falls on a German city [in retaliation]
you can call me 'Meyer'."
Goering's "Operation Eagle" strategy was a magnificent failure. It
not only shifted British public opinion in favor of the war, but it gave the
British time to regroup, preventing Hitler from launching his invasion of
Britain...operation Sea Lion. (Later in the war, many Germans secretly
called him "Meyer", a name synonymous with German Jews.)
George W. Bush may indeed be following in Goering's footsteps in his
mishandling of the entire Iraq affair. And by antagonizing civilians while
carrying out assisinations perceived by many in Iraq as being villainous, he
may be creating a potent future enemy for the U.S.
The author studied Austrian Neoclassical economics under Dr. George Reisman. However, he developed the view that a debt-money system made a truly free economic system impossible and led to excessive class stratifications that leads to instability. This is contrary to the currently prevailing Monetarist viewpoint of Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan and company.
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