The Source of Hopelessness
A Review of Al Gore's
An Inconvenient Truth
by
Catherine Austin Fitts
Solari, Inc.
©
Copyright 2006, Catherine Austin Fitts,
www.solari.com. All
Rights Reserved. May be reprinted, distributed or posted on
an Internet web site for non-profit purposes only.
July 24th 2006, 11:50
[PST] - The day after
9-11, a person whom I respect and care about a great deal
said to me, "George Bush was anointed by God for a time such
as this." He then asked me what I thought. I said that I
thought that the Bush family was anointed by financial
fraud, narcotics trafficking, and pedophilia. Stunned, he
said, "If that is true, then it's hopeless." I replied that
things were far from hopeless, but that for me solutions
started with faith in a divine intelligence rather than
affirming a dependent relationship with organized crime.
Last week I had dinner with
a wonderful couple -- activists in the San Francisco Bay
Area-- and the woman told me how wonderful she thought Al
Gore's documentary An Inconvenient Truth was. She
then asked for my opinion. When I gave it, she said, "If
that is true, then it's hopeless." We then proceeded to have
a rich conversation about why folks who used to call
themselves “liberal” or “progressive” are in the same trap
as folks who use to call themselves “conservative “
In order to respond to the
problem of global warming, it is necessary to look at the
ways that we as citizens support criminal activity by our
government and how we as consumers, depositors and investors
support the private banking, corporate and investment
interests that run our government in this manner. This is
easier said than done. When we ‘get it’ – i.e., that we
have to withdraw from a co-dependent relationship with
organized crime in order to save and rebuild our world – we
can find ourselves struggling to envision the system-wide
actions that are needed and feeling overwhelmed by the task
of determining how to go about them personally and in
collaboration with others.
My nickname for our current
economic system is
“The Tapeworm.” For decades I have listened to Americans
from all walks of life insist that we must find solutions
within the system – i.e. within the socially acceptable
boundaries laid down by the Tapeworm. Believing that our
solutions for addressing global warming lie within the
system defined by the Tapeworm goes hand in hand with
obtaining our media from companies controlled by the
Tapeworm, and having to choose from among leaders anointed
by the Tapeworm, such as Al Gore. This belief is, in fact,
the source of our hopelessness.
George Orwell once said that omission is the greatest form
of lie. Gore's omissions in An Inconvenient Truth
are so extraordinary that it is hard to know where to start.
Watching An Inconvenient Truth is more useful for
understanding how propaganda is made and used than for
understanding the risks of global warming (I am not
qualified to judge the scientific evidence here -- I am
assuming that Gore's presentation on global warming is
sound).
The fundamental lie that Al
Gore is telling comes from defining our problem as
environmental -- in this case global warming, whereas our
environmental problems -- as real and important as they are
-- are but a symptom of the problem, not the problem. Gore
defines our problem as "what." He is silent on "who." For
example, Gore does not ask or answer:
- Who has been governing our planet this
way and why?
- Who has suppressed alternative
technologies resulting in our dependency on fossil
fuels? Why?
- Who has how much financial capital
generated from this damage?
- How did things get this bad without our
changing? How much was related to fear of and dirty
tricks of those in charge?
- How do we recapture resources that have
been criminally drained and use them to invest in
restoring environmental balance?
Utah Phillips once said, "The earth is
not dying. It is being killed, and the people killing it
have names and addresses." In one sentence, Utah Phillips
told us more about global warming than Al Gore has told us
in a lifetime of writing and speaking, let alone in An
Inconvenient Truth.
Needless to say, Gore offers
no names and addresses. Gore's "who" discussion is limited
to population. He seems to imply that the issue is the
growth in population combined with busy people being
shortsighted, leading to some giant incompetency
"accident." That makes it easy to avoid digging into the
areas that would naturally follow from starting with "who" –
which should lead to dissecting the relationship between
environmental deterioration and the prevailing global
investment model that is such a critical part of the
governance infrastructure and incentive systems.
Gore walks us through
timelines showing the global warming of temperatures. By
defining the problem as simply environmental damage, and
shrinking the history down to temperatures, there is no need
to correlate environmental deterioration with the growth of
the global financial system and the resulting centralization
of economic and political power. The planet is being run by
people who are intentionally killing it. Their power is
their ability to offer all of us ways of making money by
helping them kill it. Hence, understanding how the mechanics
of the financial system and the accumulation of financial
capital relate to environmental destruction is essential. If
we integrate these deeper systems into an historical
timeline, authentic solutions will begin to emerge. But
Gore omits the deeper systems and the lessons of how we got
here and in so doing closes the door on transformation.
For example, there is no
place on Gore’s time line that shows:
- the creation of the Federal Reserve:
- the movement of currencies away from
the gold standard:
- the growth of non-accountable fiat
currency systems:
- the growth of consumer, mortgage and
government debt;
- the growth in the superior rights of
corporations over people and living things;
- the growth of "privatization" (which I
call “piratization”);
- the subversive and sometimes violent
suppression of renewable energy, housing and
transportation technologies and innovations;
- the growth of the offshore financial
system and the use of that system to launder and
accumulate vast sums of pirated capital accumulated
through the onshore destruction of communities.
Understanding the
fundamental imbalance of the corporate model -- where
enterprises have the rights of personhood, but not the
finite existence of people or the legal responsibilities and
liabilities -- and the corporate model's economic dependence
on subsidy that drives up debt, economic warfare and the
destruction of all living things is a critical piece to
developing actions to reverse environmental damage. Al Gore
is a man that has made money for corporations his entire
life. He is a member in good standing of the Tapeworm and
his current lifestyle and this documentary are rich with the
resources that corporations can provide.
There is also no personal
accountability. Al Gore has not “come clean.” There is no
discussion of Gore's role in the Clinton Administration in
facilitating worldwide economic centralization and warfare,
and with it genocide and environmental destruction -- for
example, there is no mention of
The Rape Of Russia or the driving out of Washington of
an investment model proposing to align places with capital
markets to create a win-win economic model that he intimates
is possible. For more, see my recently published case study
on Tapeworm Economics, and the competition between two
economic visions during the Clinton Administration,
"Dillon,
Read & the Aristocracy of Prison Profits".
The documentary ends with a
long list of things that we can do. Many of these items are
on my list. We all need to come clean in the process of
evolving towards sustainability. However, without a new
investment model and the governance changes that
automatically follow, the result of An Inconvenient
Truth is to teach us to be good consumers of global oil
and consumer product corporations and banks and -- we are
supposed to intuitively understand -- vote for Al Gore or
the candidates he endorses. Gore draws us down a rabbit
hole, which leaves us even more dependent on the people and
institutions that created and profited from the problem in
the first place. What that means is that the real solution
will be significant depopulation. The viewer is left to
preserve a bit of the shrinking American bubble to protect
us from having to face the depopulation solutions underway
(See above links on “The Rape Of Russia” and “Dillon , Read
& The Aristocracy Of Prison Profits”.)
The way a tapeworm operates
inside our bodies is to inject a chemical into its host that
makes it crave what is good for the tapeworm and bad for the
host. An Inconvenient Truth is an injection from
the Tapeworm. Don’t see it and crave a new round of what has
not worked before. Things are not hopeless. There is no need
to waste time and money adoring and financing the people who
are killing the planet, or counting on the politicians who
protect them.
To get you started, let me
recommend that you take the money and time that you would
spend watching An Inconvenient Truth and invest it
in reading or watching a few of many authentic leaders with
useful maps and solutions that are leading to serious
ecosystem healing and transformation:
Mind Control, Mind Freedom
By Jon Rappoport
http://jonrappoportstore.com/rappoport/product.php?productid=22&cat=1&page=1
Escaping the Matrix: How We
the People Can Change the World
By Richard Moore
http://www.escapingthematrix.org
http://www.cyberproject.org
America: From Freedom to
Fascism
A documentary by Aaron Russo
http://www.freedomtofascism.com/
Scholars for 9/11 Truth
[While there are some good people involved with the
Scholars for 9/11 Truth, FTW does not endorse their
editorial policy nor most of the research presented by
them. - MK]
What The Bleep Do We Know?
A documentary by William Arntz, Betsy Chasse and Mark
Vicente
http://www.whatthebleep.com/
Messages from Water
http://www.hado.net
The Gold Anti-Trust Action
Committee
Bill Murphy, Chris Powell
http://www.gata.org
Cynthia McKinney for
Congress
http://www.cynthiaforcongress.com/
Ron Paul for Congress
http://www.ronpaulforcongress.com/
Can you imagine what these
folks could do and what could happen if we all invested 2
hours each and the price of a movie theatre ticket in their
work? Can you imagine what would happen if all the money
donated to Al Gore and candidates like him were invested in
authentic leaders and our access to them? I can – and the
truth and beauty of that future fills my life and work with
hope.
Catherine
Austin Fitts is President of Solari and may be
contacted at
www.solari.com
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