Maybe
                                    you're thinking: Well, Hightower, sure, if a dictatorship was imposed here in the US of A, then, by golly, you can bet your
                                    boots that I'd stand up! Too late, manana patriot.
                                     
                                    A
                                    military coup is not the only way to slip the plush rug of America's democracy from beneath
                                    your motionless feet. A few tugs here and a couple of hard yanks there . . . and it's gone. And they've been tugging and yanking
                                    furiously of late, taking scores of actions that would cause Paul Revere to mount up again, including: Ashcroft's ruling that
                                    the FBI can secretly infiltrate and spy on political and church meetings without a warrant (yes, your meetings, not
                                    just the meetings of Muslims or dark-skinned, foreign, "terrorist-looking" people); the federal judge's ruling that New Yorkers
                                    could be denied their constitutional right to march in protest of Bush's war plans, instead relegating them to a ten-thousand-person
                                    "rally pen" where they "could be adequately policed"; Ashcroft's PATRIOT Act II, which would provide advance immunity for
                                    federal agents who conduct illegal surveillance at the behest of top executive branch officials (a provision that would
                                    have protected Nixon's illegal wiretappers).
                                     
                                    This
                                    undermining of our basic civil liberties and imposition of antidemocratic police power are in addition to other maneuvers
                                    that are steadily strangling our people's democracy:
                                     
                                    The Supreme Court's
                                    1976 ruling that campaign money is "speech" effectively negates the value of your vote and electoral participation, while
                                    giving a handful of corporations and wealthy interests far more "speech" than the rest of us and also putting the possibility
                                    of holding public office beyond the reach of ordinary Americans. Nothing has been so destructive of our nation's promise of
                                    democratic representation as has this totally un-American decree—which neither political party challenges.
                                     
                                    The unheralded
                                    provisions of NAFTA, the WTO, the forthcoming FTAA (Free Trade Area of the Americas), and other arcane trade schemes that
                                    allow global corporations to wield veto power over your local, state, and national laws, usurping our people's right to self-
                                    government—a
                                    theft of power that has been pulled off without the people knowing it, much less agreeing to it.
                                     
                                    With a massive
                                    infusion of campaign donations, a half-dozen conglomerates have gotten Congress and the FCC to rush through a radical
                                    rewriting of the rules so that they now control our public airwaves, making a mockery of our "Freedom of the Press" and restricting
                                    the mass-media debate to corporate-approved topics and viewpoints.
                                     
                                    Don't
                                    expect these political, corporate, media, and other money powers to alert you to the fact that big chunks of your democracy,
                                    right here in the US of A, already have been seriously damaged or stolen— and they're certainly not going to rally us
                                    to the essential cause of repairing and retaking our democracy. That's up to us.
                                     
                                    Of
                                    course, BushCo is hoping we're idiots, and to help keep our minds from wandering to what's going on with democracy here in
                                    The Homeland, they have us riveted on color-coded threats from afar, warning sternly that millions of the world's people
                                    hate us—indeed, as George so eloquently put it, "They hate our freedoms."
                                    Bullfeathers!
                                    Start with this, George: The world's people are perfectly able to discern the difference between the American people on the
                                    one hand and America's corporate and military force on the other.
                                     
                                    What they hate is that our government, corporations,
                                    and military storm around the world in betrayal of every democratic value that the American people hold dear. Bush poses grandly
                                    as the noble spearpoint for democracy, yet he (like his predecessors) is a willing accomplice of brutal dictators
                                    and global corporate powers that oppress the world's people, impoverish them, and plunder their resources. Through his
                                    perpetual war agenda, his oil buddies, the World Bank, the arms dealers, his defiance of environmental and human rights
                                    treaties, and dozens of other actions, George W (and our Congress) is an enthusiastic supporter of global-scale theft and
                                    thuggery.
                                     
                                    Perhaps
                                    he thinks (whoops, back up, that's too strong of a concept for him, so let's start over). Perhaps it doesn't cross his mind
                                    that the people who are being run over can clearly see America's economic, governmental, and military
                                    might behind the thievery and thuggery. Aung San Suu Kyi damned sure saw it. When the generals threw out Burma's elected government and
                                    installed themselves in power, the U.S. did nothing in support of democracy. Worse, our government
                                    turned its back as Unocal, Texaco, and Halliburton cut deals with the new junta (which had given itself the Orwellian
                                    moniker of SLORC, the State Law and Order Restoration Council) to develop gas fields there and build the billion-dollar Yadana
                                    pipeline across the country. The pipeline partnership stole land from farmers, displaced entire villages, uprooted sections
                                    of rain forests, and conscripted locals who were forced at gunpoint to help construct the pipeline. Unocal, based in
                                    California, is still in partnership with these dictators, who daily hound and harass Suu Kyi.
                                     
                                    Such upstanding American corporations as Disney,
                                    Eddie Bauer, Levi Strauss, Liz Clai-borne, Macy's, and PepsiCo also made business deals with the devils of Burma—though
                                    grassroots boycotts and political pressure back here in the U.S. and elsewhere finally forced them to withdraw (www.freeburma.org).
                                     
                                    It
                                    is this investment by our oil giants and other corporations that has given the generals the wherewithal to build and maintain
                                    a police state that boasts 300,000 armed forces deployed to stifle democracy and keep the dictatorship in power. This is the
                                    face of America that much of the world sees—the faces of executives from
                                    Unocal, Halliburton, Disney, and others, standing side by side with the SLORCs of the world.
                                     
                                    Yet
                                    Suu Kyi does not hate you and me. She knows the difference between us and our corrupt leadership. She knows and shares
                                    our egalitarian values, and she is sacrificing her comfort, happiness, and quite possibly her life to try to extend to her
                                    country the very values that you and I cherish. She and oppressed people throughout the world love freedom, and they look
                                    to the American people as a beacon of the democracy that they seek.
                                     
                                    The irony is that she is more aware of what we're
                                    at serious risk of losing here than most Americans are.
                                     
                                     
                                     
                                     
                                     
                                    How corporate America views democracy:
When Dick Cheney, former CEO of Halliburton was asked about human rights
                                    violations his company supported including the providing over $400 million to Burma’s totalitarian rulers and Halliburton’s
                                    use of forced labor, he replied:  “You have to operate in some very difficult places and
                                    oftentimes in countries that are governed in a manner that’s not consistent with our principles here in the United States.”   “Have to”; I can only wonder who is forcing the
                                    CEO to do such business?  Could it be that the rule of the game is to maximize profits?