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I just finished it today--actually, the bits that linked up the torture and the way all of the "nation building" in Iraq was about "nation-creating" and really remaking the Iraqi people through the humiliation and destruction, and, just like so many moments in the course of this book, there were times I just saved my place, put the book down, and felt a little sick, because it was just plausible and disgusting.
I don't think I was surprised by her conclusions or narrative. But I think it was kind of meaningful, like, more real to me, to see in print in a paperback book that at least someone was going to say that the whole war was a way of effacing a culture, and putting up a really sucky mall. That the land of the black-headed people of Sumer, the land of the Akkadian invasion of Sargon, the land of Shinar from the Bible, the place where writing, where a lot of our folklore, came from, the place of Ishtar mourning her lover and where they spoke of a flood before the Old Testament was written, where Gilgamesh sent a whore to civilize Enkidu, where....
I like archeaology, I hate the Iraq War. I like the Iraqi people, I hate what we did to them. I like to think America is about spreading democracy, but I also know our leaders have mistaken an incompatible form of laissez-faire capitalism for democratic freedoms, and just don't get the difference. I long ago cynicaly accepted as a punch-line that the war was for Halliburton, KBR and the multinational oil concerns.
I just didn't anticipate that I'd not only see it well-drawn out in writing, or that I'd want to shove the book away every few pages. I didn't expect that in Iraq they already know their lot is a joke that no one laughs at. That more than "sectarian violence", some of the unrest has to do with revolt at the way democracy and freedom were always just words--imposition and corporate contracts were always the name of the game.
I really recommend this book. A lot of blame gets heaped on ecomomists--Milton Freidman especially, and Jeffrey Sachs, who doesn't seem such a bad fellow now from what he posts at Huffpo. The real issue to me is the so-called elected representatives of the people, who come to represent various corporations' interests instead of the people that they should serve. It was a lot to take in.
Anyone else have a comment on this book?
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