Congress has just failed to pass the 9/11 health care bill,
which would have compensated and provided medical care for thousands of first
responders, those who have become gravely ill from breathing toxic dust at the
World Trade Center nearly nine years ago.
Hundreds have already died. At the time, our government
declared the air at Ground Zero safe, just as it had vouched that Agent Orange
was harmless several decades earlier, or Corexit innocuous now. Soon enough,
thousands of BP clean up workers will have to litigate, and many, if not most,
will die before they�ll see a penny. Same old, same old.
Opposing the 9/11 bill, many congressmen complained about
its $7.4 billion price tag. Enough of big government, it�s belt tightening
time! We�ll only loosen our purse string, of course, to assist distressed
banks. In 2008, Washington gave $12.9 billion to Goldman Sachs, which came to
$42 for every American man, woman and child, including the unemployed and the
homeless. Come on, man, don�t be so stingy! It�s Goldman Sachs, dude! The 9/11
health bill would have cost each of us 24 bucks, but you must get your
priorities straight, and our leaders, whether Republican or Democratic, always
know who they must take care of first, last and always. Pennsylvania Avenue and
Wall Street run in a loop.
Unlike Salahi or Lewinsky, Goldman Sachs alumni don�t need
ruses or tricks to party inside the White House. Guess whose head�s been
bobbing all this time? Speaking of noggins, here is some good news: Unlike in
the Third World, where there�s corruption at every level, where nearly everyone
with any power, whether a policeman, fireman, clerk or teacher, uses it as
leverage to earn a few extra bucks, we are, for now, only rotting at the top.
Only our head stinks.
And boy, does it stink! Last week, we learned that the
Pentagon has �misplaced� $8.7 billion in Iraq reconstruction fund, money made
from the sale of Iraqi oil and gas, and from assets frozen before we invaded.
We stole their money, in short, and they are suing to get it back. White-collar
thieves normally tweak ledgers, but the Pentagon was so corrupt, it didn�t even
bother. Billions have disappeared before without provoking an outrage. With our
beer and SUV peddling media spewing nonstop garbage, nothing of consequence can
stay in focus for long. Today�s headline: �Animal Experts Debunk the Alpha-Dog
Myth.�
Until now, corruption has remained an abstraction to most
Americans. That�s why it doesn�t quite hurt. Soon enough, however, expect to
experience it up close. As all of our governments, from federal on down,
continue to operate in the red, municipal wages will fail to keep up with costs
of living. That�s why petty graft will become a part of daily life, just like
in the so-called developing world.
In fact, we are already a part of the undeveloping world.
Are we not men? We are undevo. As we unravel, be prepared to pay traffic cops
when they stop you for any violation, real or imagined. �Speeding? But I wasn�t
speeding, officer!� �Of course you were speeding.� Be ready to tip teachers so
they will give your kids a better grade and won�t ignore them in class. As we
slide, government will become much more inefficient, to the point where you
must pay a bribe to get anything done. If you need a passport or a driver�s
license, there�s no harm in greasing the palm of that unsmiling clerk.
The poorest Americans already know about the insolence, contempt
or brutality of some petty officials, for they have longed experienced Third
World conditions inside this �greatest of nations.� For most of us, that sucker
punch still coils. We�re still number one, if only in our minds. Why, there�s
an impressive new skyscraper in downtown Manhattan, catty corner from the site
of the World Trade Center. It�s the new headquarters of Goldman Sachs. With a
timely assist from American working stiffs, the world�s leading swindling
outfit is not doing too badly, it is clear. Should this gleaming edifice ever
blow up, however, I�d advise future first responders to think twice before
inhaling the pulverized banksters. These silk-suited gentlemen are more toxic
than anything you can imagine.
Linh Dinh is the author of two books of stories
and five of poems, with a novel, Love Like Hate, scheduled for release. He�s tracking our deteriorating socialscape
through his frequently updated photo blog, State
of the Union.