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Soylent
Green is Oil
June
7, 2002
By
Dwayne Eutsey
I
watched the last part of "Soylent Green" the other night, that
popcorn-paranoia flick where Charlton Heston discovers the unsavory truth
about a new corporate snack food.
The
movie's been out since the '70s, so I don't think I'm spoiling the ending
here (along with your appetite) by revealing the secret. Heston himself,
in his usual teeth gritting, sweaty, overly dramatic way, exposes what
it is when he cries out at the end that: "Soylent Green is people!
It's PEOPLE!"
Maybe
that's why ol' Chuck refuses to give up his Uzi unless you pry it from
his cold, dead fingers. Anyone from Nabisco knocking at his door wanting
to make a new line of Charlton Heston snack treats gets one right between
the eyes, bucko.
Anyway,
as I watched Heston screaming out the truth about soylent green to a city
sleeping in darkness, I couldn't help but think of the most recent developments
in Afghanistan.
According
to news reports, mostly from European media, construction of a $2 billion
oil pipeline through that battered and broken country has received the
green light -- or perhaps that should be the "soylent green light"
-- now that the Taliban is gone.
What
do I mean? Chew on these morsels:
-
As far back as the early-'90s, a coalition of US oil interests, led by
the Houston-based Unocal Corp., has wanted to build a pipeline through
the region. They began negotiations with the Taliban in 1995 to accomplish
this.
- According to a 1997 memo from Ken Lay to then Gov. George W. Bush, Enron
was also negotiating a "$2 billion venture" with Uzbekistan
and Russia. Lay told Bush the venture could "bring significant economic
opportunity to Texas" and "political benefit to the United States."
- Also in 1997, Unocal and Texas oil barons invited Taliban leaders to Texas.
According to The Telegraph (UK), the "high-ranking delegation was
given VIP treatment during their four-day stay." They stayed in a
five-star hotel and were chauffeured in a Unocal minibus.
- After the Taliban is linked to Osama Bin Laden and terrorist attacks against
American embassies in Africa, Unocal abandons the project because it doesn't
want to appear supportive of the Taliban government.
- George Bush steals the election in 2000 and continues negotiations with
the Taliban, giving the repressive regime millions of dollars in aid.
- Negotiations stall in August 2001 and the Bush administration draws up
plans for a war with Afghanistan.
- The September 11 terrorist attacks provide an excuse for bombing Afghanistan
and removing the Taliban from power.
- After ousting the Taliban, the Bush administration engineers the rise
to power of two former Unocal employees: interim President Hamid Karzai,
and Bush's envoy to Afghanistan, Zalmay Khalizad.
- May 2002: Plans for the oil pipeline through Afghanistan are approved.
So
what's this oily recipe for greed and war got to do with "Soylent
Green?" It occured to me as I watched the gruesome truth come out
in the movie that the main ingredient Heston discovers is used to manufacture
all those little green squares also helped make this pipeline possible:
Dead
bodies.
Thousands
of them, in fact. Some estimates say 10,000 (some others go as high as
20,000) Afghan civilians are now dead as a result of the US bombing campaign.
Of course, that doesn't include the 3,000 who died in the 9/11 attacks
as a result of the Bush administration's incompetence (or worse).
Thousands
of innocent Afghan men, women, and children, killed. Not to combat terrorism
at all, but according to all the evidence, to build a pipeline.
As
with soylent green, once you learn how that pipeline was really made,
it sure leaves a nasty taste in your mouth, doesn't it?
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