台風の上陸前、暴風雨の吹き荒れる今日は、稽古も中止しました。そして、夕方からの大学の講義も台風の影響で休講。
今年は、災害や天候不順で講義が少なくなり、学生たちに申し訳ないような気がします。ごめんな。来週はいい講義するぜ☆
そんな今日という日は、家の中に閉じ込められ、買い物行くのもなんなので夕食は僕がオニオン・スープを作りました。
メインディッシュは鳥のハーブ漬け。
あと一時間もしたら夕食にしようね、などと言っていたら、下の娘が最新作の詩を持ってきて朗読してくれました。
サッシの窓が強風でがたがたいう中で、彼女の読んでくれた詩は、台風一過の青空を感じさせてくれるものでした。
『あの鳥はどこまで飛ぶの?』
by Sion
あの鳥はどこまで飛ぶの?
大きな弧をえがいて
小さいころ よく行っていた公園 今はどうなっているのかな?
大きな桜の木 細いケヤキの木
いつのものように
そこに立っている
あの鳥はどこまで飛ぶの?
大きな弧をえがいて
風にゆられながら 飛んでいる あの鳥
風の色 空気の音 空の声
耳を澄ませば 聞こえるもの
立ち止まると 見えるもの
さがしてごらん
2011年9月21日水曜日
2011年8月30日火曜日
夏の終わりなのかな
これローカル線の線路なんですけど、あのトトロに出てくる線路のモデルだと思われます♪
夏の午前の光の中で、いい感じに線路が続いているな☆
今日は稽古がオフ!
だけど一日中たまった仕事を集中して消化。そして、僕の明日がやってくるんだぜ!!
久しぶりにネットを再開した途端、昔の知り合いやかつての教え子と再会の連続。
24時間は限られているので、なかなかネットのコミュニケーションの時間はとれませんが、夏の終わりに、なんかまた面白くなってきたようです!
まだまだ暑いだろうから、お身体大切に♪
☆上野火山☆
2011年8月29日月曜日
青空の下
いつもの稽古場へ続く道☆
見上げれば、ぽっかりとジブリ雲。
今日は俳優たちがくる前にバミります!
バミる、っていうのは、テープでステージの実寸を出すこと。
今日は実寸で大道具を使った稽古!
青空の下で、本日から更に本番に近づきます☆
稽古が本当に楽しい今日この頃です!!
☆上野火山☆
2011年8月28日日曜日
十月公演の詳細
十月公演の『イマジン 20km圏内』の詳細は当ブログの「最新公演情報」をご覧頂くか、以下のサイトでも詳細をご覧頂けます☆
空中スケッチ・ホームページ
http://web.me.com/volcano2/Kazan-official/page23/page24/page24.html
チケット販売も開始いたしました☆
以下の劇団事務局にメールでご予約お申し込み下さい!
■チケットご予約・申し込み先
<空中スケッチ事務局:メール・アドレス>
kuchu.sketch@gmail.com
■インフォメーション
○空中スケッチ URL
http://web.mac.com/volcano2
○上野火山・公式ブログ
http://volcano-kazan.blogspot.com/
○空中スケッチ・公式ブログ
http://ameblo.jp/kuuchu-sketch/
空中スケッチ・ホームページ
http://web.me.com/volcano2/Kazan-official/page23/page24/page24.html
チケット販売も開始いたしました☆
以下の劇団事務局にメールでご予約お申し込み下さい!
■チケットご予約・申し込み先
<空中スケッチ事務局:メール・アドレス>
kuchu.sketch@gmail.com
■インフォメーション
○空中スケッチ URL
http://web.mac.com/volcano2
○上野火山・公式ブログ
http://volcano-kazan.blogspot.com/
○空中スケッチ・公式ブログ
http://ameblo.jp/kuuchu-sketch/
灰になるまで
長らくご無沙汰してました☆ごめんね、みんな!
稽古と仕事に追われ、ネットからぐぐっと遠ざかっておりました。しかし、これから戻って毎日更新していきます!よろしく!
実は、今月初め、僕の初期の舞台「水伝説」の出演者であり、現在はNHKで美術を担当していたヒロミちゃんの告別式がありました。
いつも笑顔の絶えない女性でした。二人の男の子の母にして優秀な美術家でした。
この世界では優しい人が先に逝ってしまいます。
昔やっていたバンドにもコーラスで参加してくれました。ある大学の学園祭でロックしたとき、彼女も素敵なコーラスを聴かしてくれました。
二十代、共に思い切り楽しんだ友でした。
告別式で、ご主人の最後の言葉が今も胸に響いています。
「…今日は、彼女を灰になるまで見送るつもりです。」
暑い夏の日の午前の光の中、彼女は見送られていきました。
「灰になるまで…」
そう、僕らは灰になるまで愛し合うんだ。そして、死がそこにあることを意識しながら、夢中で生きていきたいものです。
灰になるまで、夢中で。
ヒロミちゃんが教えてくれた。
稽古と仕事に追われ、ネットからぐぐっと遠ざかっておりました。しかし、これから戻って毎日更新していきます!よろしく!
実は、今月初め、僕の初期の舞台「水伝説」の出演者であり、現在はNHKで美術を担当していたヒロミちゃんの告別式がありました。
いつも笑顔の絶えない女性でした。二人の男の子の母にして優秀な美術家でした。
この世界では優しい人が先に逝ってしまいます。
昔やっていたバンドにもコーラスで参加してくれました。ある大学の学園祭でロックしたとき、彼女も素敵なコーラスを聴かしてくれました。
二十代、共に思い切り楽しんだ友でした。
告別式で、ご主人の最後の言葉が今も胸に響いています。
「…今日は、彼女を灰になるまで見送るつもりです。」
暑い夏の日の午前の光の中、彼女は見送られていきました。
「灰になるまで…」
そう、僕らは灰になるまで愛し合うんだ。そして、死がそこにあることを意識しながら、夢中で生きていきたいものです。
灰になるまで、夢中で。
ヒロミちゃんが教えてくれた。
2011年6月24日金曜日
今日も元気だ!
昨日、清志郎の「人間のクズ」を聴いていてつくづく詩人だなぁ、と思った。
人間の本質を、こんなに端的にスッキリ表しているものはそう多くはない。恐らく太宰や安吾やミラーやブコウスキーぐらいかな。
自分自身を嘲笑うことができるところに本物の詩を感じることができる。あっ中原中也もそうだな。結構いるね。いや、クズばっかりだな!!
種田山頭火の句に「どうしようもないわたしが歩いてゐる 」というのがあるけれど、この「どうしようもない」という自己認識を案外持つことがし難いのだと思う。大抵プライドが邪魔するし、ヘタをすればただのみっともない開き直りになってしまうから。
しかし、ロックはこのどうしょうもなさからはじまっている。まぁ、ジャンルについては人それぞれですが。ただ僕はロックの魂は「クズの自覚」だろうと思う。これは下品な開き直りじゃないよ。
もし、上に上げた作家達がこの世に生きていれば、全員人間のクズで、全員崇高な人々だった。
人間のクズという感覚は最も人間の人格の上で「品」のある自覚だと思う。
上品になりたかったらクズになれ、いやクズの自分を自覚しろ!
俺は、クズだッ!!!!
本当に我々はもっと自分の「クズ性」に自覚的でなければいけないとすら思う今日この頃である。
保安委員の不倫などどうでもいいのである。消えてなくなれ!!
人間のクズ/忌野清志郎 Little Screaming Revue
人間の本質を、こんなに端的にスッキリ表しているものはそう多くはない。恐らく太宰や安吾やミラーやブコウスキーぐらいかな。
自分自身を嘲笑うことができるところに本物の詩を感じることができる。あっ中原中也もそうだな。結構いるね。いや、クズばっかりだな!!
種田山頭火の句に「どうしようもないわたしが歩いてゐる 」というのがあるけれど、この「どうしようもない」という自己認識を案外持つことがし難いのだと思う。大抵プライドが邪魔するし、ヘタをすればただのみっともない開き直りになってしまうから。
しかし、ロックはこのどうしょうもなさからはじまっている。まぁ、ジャンルについては人それぞれですが。ただ僕はロックの魂は「クズの自覚」だろうと思う。これは下品な開き直りじゃないよ。
もし、上に上げた作家達がこの世に生きていれば、全員人間のクズで、全員崇高な人々だった。
人間のクズという感覚は最も人間の人格の上で「品」のある自覚だと思う。
上品になりたかったらクズになれ、いやクズの自分を自覚しろ!
俺は、クズだッ!!!!
本当に我々はもっと自分の「クズ性」に自覚的でなければいけないとすら思う今日この頃である。
保安委員の不倫などどうでもいいのである。消えてなくなれ!!
人間のクズ/忌野清志郎 Little Screaming Revue
2011年6月18日土曜日
国家を解体するもの
つい最近行われたノーム・チョムスキーのスピーチの一部。
アラブ諸国の国民が最も警戒しているのは、国民の要求に応えようとする政府を警戒し、その政府に攻撃を加える現在のアメリカの戦略だ。米国が他国に介入し内乱を引き起こし、解体に追い込む様はイラクやアフガニスタン以外にも枚挙のいとまがないほどだ。こうした戦略の一部を日本も担っているのは事実。そして多国籍企業となった日本の企業の多くもグローバリゼーションというアメリカ発の国家戦略に乗って動いている。今この時代は情報戦争と経済戦争と内戦と他国の介入という形で世界が破壊されつつあるのである。
興味のある方は読んで頂きたい。
アメリカとその同盟国(勿論日本も含む)は「本物」の民主主義を妨げるためだったらなんだってする、というスピーチ:常識という妄想から目覚めたいと思う。
NOAM CHOMSKY: The U.S. and its allies will do anything they can to prevent authentic democracy in the Arab world. The reason is very simple. Across the region, an overwhelming majority of the population regards the United States as the main threat to their interests. In fact, opposition to U.S. policy is so high that a considerable majority think the region would be more secure if Iran had nuclear weapons. In Egypt, the most important country, that’s 80 percent. Similar figures elsewhere. There are some in the region who regard Iran as a threat—about 10 percent. Well, plainly, the U.S. and its allies are not going to want governments which are responsive to the will of the people. If that happens, not only will the U.S. not control the region, but it will be thrown out. So that’s obviously an intolerable result.
In the case of WikiLeaks, there was an interesting aside on this. The revelations from WikiLeaks that got the most publicity—headlines, euphoric commentary and so on—were that the Arabs support U.S. policy on Iran. They were quoting comments of Arab dictators. Yes, they claim to support U.S. policy on Iran. There was no mention of the Arab—of the Arab population, because it doesn’t matter. If the dictators support us, and the population is under control, then what’s the problem? This is like imperialism. What’s the problem if it works? As long as they can control their populations, fine. They can have campaigns of hatred; our friendly dictators will keep them under control. That’s the reaction not just of the diplomatic service in the State Department or of the media who reported this, but also of the general intellectual community. There is no comment on this. In fact, coverage of these polls is precisely zero in the United States, literally. There’s a few comments in England, but very little. It just doesn’t matter what the population thinks, as long as they’re under control.
Well, from these observations, you can conclude pretty quickly, pretty easily, what policies are going to be. You can almost spell them out. So in the case of an oil-rich country with a reliable, obedient dictator, they’re given free rein. Saudi Arabia is the most important. There were—it’s the most repressive, extremist, strongest center of Islamic fundamentalism, missionaries who spread ultra-radical Islamism from jihadis and so on. But they’re obedient, they’re reliable, so they can do what they like. There was a planned protest in Saudi Arabia. The police presence was so overwhelming and intimidating that literally nobody even was willing to show up in the streets of Riyadh. But that was fine. The same in Kuwait. There was a small demonstration, very quickly crushed, no comment.
Actually, the most interesting case in many respects is Bahrain. Bahrain is quite important for two reasons. One reason, which has been reported, is that it’s the home port of the U.S. Fifth Fleet, major military force in the region. Another more fundamental reason is that Bahrain is about 70 percent Shiite, and it’s right across the causeway from eastern Saudi Arabia, which also is majority Shiite and happens to be where most of Saudi oil is. Saudi Arabia, of course, is the main energy resource, has been since the '40s. By curious accident of history and geography, the world's major energy resources are located pretty much in Shiite regions. They’re a minority in the Middle East, but they happen to be where the oil is, right around the northern part of the Gulf. That’s eastern Saudi Arabia, southern Iraq and southwestern Iran. And there’s been a concern among planners for a long time that there might be a move towards some sort of tacit alliance in these Shiite regions moving towards independence and controlling the bulk of the world’s oil. That’s obviously intolerable.
So, going back to Bahrain, there was an uprising, tent city in the central square, like Tahrir Square. The Saudi-led military forces invaded Bahrain, giving the security forces there the opportunity to crush it violently, destroyed the tent city, even destroyed the Pearl, which is the symbol of Bahrain; invaded the major hospital complex, threw out the patients and the doctors; been regularly, every day, arresting human rights activists, torturing them, occasionally a sort of a pat on the wrist, but nothing much. That’s very much the Carothers principle. If actions correspond to our strategic and economic objectives, that’s OK. We can have elegant rhetoric, but what matters is facts.
Well, that’s the oil-rich obedient dictators. What about Egypt, most important country, but not a center of—major center of oil production? Well, in Egypt and Tunisia and other countries of that category, there is a game plan, which is employed routinely, so commonly it takes virtual genius not to perceive it. But when you have a favored dictator—for those of you who might think of going into the diplomatic service, you might as well learn it—when there’s a favored dictator and he’s getting into trouble, support him as long as possible, full support as long as possible. When it becomes impossible to support him—like, say, maybe the army turns against him, business class turns against him—then send him off somewhere, issue ringing declarations about your love of democracy, and then try to restore the old regime, maybe with new names. And that’s done over and over again. It doesn’t always work, but it’s always tried—Somoza, Nicaragua; Shah in Iran; Marcos in the Philippines; Duvalier in Haiti; Chun in South Korea; Mobutu in the Congo; Ceausescu is one of Western favorites in Romania; Suharto in Indonesia. It’s completely routine. And that’s exactly what’s going on in Egypt and Tunisia. OK, we support them right to the end—Mubarak in Egypt, right to the end, keep supporting him. Doesn’t work any longer, send him off to Sharm el-Sheikh, pull out the rhetoric, try to restore the old regime. That’s, in fact, what the conflict is about right now. As Amy said, we don’t know where it’s going to turn now, but that’s what’s going on.
Well, there’s another category. The other category is an oil-rich dictator who’s not reliable, who’s a loose cannon. That’s Libya. And there, there’s a different policy: try to get a more reliable dictator. And that’s exactly what’s happening. Of course, describe it as a humanitarian intervention. That’s another near historical universal. You check history, virtually every resort to force, by whoever it is, is accompanied by the most noble rhetoric. It’s all completely humanitarian. That includes Hitler taking over Czechoslovakia, the Japanese fascists rampaging in northeast China. In fact, it’s Mussolini in Ethiopia. There’s hardly any exceptions. So you produce that, and the media and commentators present—pretend they don’t notice that it has no—carries no information, because it’s reflexive.
And then—but in this case, they could also add something else, which has been repeated over and over again, namely, the U.S. and its allies were intervening in response to a request by the Arab League. And, of course, we have to recognize the importance of that. Incidentally, the response from the Arab League was tepid and was pretty soon rescinded, because they didn’t like what we were doing. But put that aside. At the very same time, the Arab League produced—issued another request. Here’s a headline from a newspaper: "Arab League Calls for Gaza No-Fly Zone." Actually, I’m quoting from the London Financial Times. That wasn’t reported in the United States. Well, to be precise, it was reported in the Washington Times, but basically blocked in the U.S., like the polls, like the polls of Arab public opinion, not the right kind of news. So, "Arab League Calls for Gaza No-Fly Zone," that’s inconsistent with U.S. policy, so that, we don’t have to honor and observe, and that disappeared.
Now, there are some polls that are reported. So here’s one from the New York Times a couple days ago. I’ll quote it. It said, "The poll found that a majority of Egyptians want to annul the 1979 peace treaty with Israel that has been a cornerstone of Egyptian foreign policy and the region’s stability." Actually, that’s not quite accurate. It’s been a cornerstone of the region’s instability, and that’s exactly why the Egyptian population wants to abandon it. The agreement essentially eliminated Egypt from the Israel-Arab conflict. That means eliminated the only deterrent to Israeli military action. And it freed up Israel to expand its operations—illegal operations—in the Occupied Territories and to attack its northern neighbor, to attack Lebanon. Shortly after, Israel attacked Lebanon, killed 20,000 people, destroyed southern Lebanon, tried to impose a client regime, didn’t quite make it. And that was understood. So the immediate reaction to the peace treaty in Israel was that there are things about it we don’t like—we’re going to have to abandon our settlements in the Sinai, in the Egyptian Sinai. But it has a good side, too, because now the only deterrent is gone; we can use force and violence to achieve our other goals. And that’s exactly what happened. And that’s exactly why the Egyptian population is opposed to it. They understand that, as does everyone in the region.
On the other hand, the Times wasn’t lying when they said that it led to the region’s stability. And the reason is because of the meaning of the word "stability" as a technical meaning. Stability is—it’s kind of like democracy. Stability means conformity to our interests. So, for example, when Iran tries to expand its influence in Afghanistan and Iraq, neighboring countries, that’s called "destabilizing." It’s part of the threat of Iran. It’s destabilizing the region. On the other hand, when the U.S. invades those countries, occupies them, half destroys them, that’s to achieve stability. And that is very common, even to the point where it’s possible to write—former editor of Foreign Affairs—that when the U.S. overthrew the democratic government in Chile and instituted a vicious dictatorship, that was because the U.S. had to destabilize Chile to achieve stability. That’s in one sentence, and nobody noticed it, because that’s correct, if you understand the meaning of the word "stability." Yeah, you overthrow a parliamentary government, you install a dictatorship, you invade a country and kill 20,000 people, you invade Iraq and kill hundreds of thousands of people—that’s all bringing about stability. Instability is when anyone gets in the way.
アラブ諸国の国民が最も警戒しているのは、国民の要求に応えようとする政府を警戒し、その政府に攻撃を加える現在のアメリカの戦略だ。米国が他国に介入し内乱を引き起こし、解体に追い込む様はイラクやアフガニスタン以外にも枚挙のいとまがないほどだ。こうした戦略の一部を日本も担っているのは事実。そして多国籍企業となった日本の企業の多くもグローバリゼーションというアメリカ発の国家戦略に乗って動いている。今この時代は情報戦争と経済戦争と内戦と他国の介入という形で世界が破壊されつつあるのである。
興味のある方は読んで頂きたい。
アメリカとその同盟国(勿論日本も含む)は「本物」の民主主義を妨げるためだったらなんだってする、というスピーチ:常識という妄想から目覚めたいと思う。
NOAM CHOMSKY: The U.S. and its allies will do anything they can to prevent authentic democracy in the Arab world. The reason is very simple. Across the region, an overwhelming majority of the population regards the United States as the main threat to their interests. In fact, opposition to U.S. policy is so high that a considerable majority think the region would be more secure if Iran had nuclear weapons. In Egypt, the most important country, that’s 80 percent. Similar figures elsewhere. There are some in the region who regard Iran as a threat—about 10 percent. Well, plainly, the U.S. and its allies are not going to want governments which are responsive to the will of the people. If that happens, not only will the U.S. not control the region, but it will be thrown out. So that’s obviously an intolerable result.
In the case of WikiLeaks, there was an interesting aside on this. The revelations from WikiLeaks that got the most publicity—headlines, euphoric commentary and so on—were that the Arabs support U.S. policy on Iran. They were quoting comments of Arab dictators. Yes, they claim to support U.S. policy on Iran. There was no mention of the Arab—of the Arab population, because it doesn’t matter. If the dictators support us, and the population is under control, then what’s the problem? This is like imperialism. What’s the problem if it works? As long as they can control their populations, fine. They can have campaigns of hatred; our friendly dictators will keep them under control. That’s the reaction not just of the diplomatic service in the State Department or of the media who reported this, but also of the general intellectual community. There is no comment on this. In fact, coverage of these polls is precisely zero in the United States, literally. There’s a few comments in England, but very little. It just doesn’t matter what the population thinks, as long as they’re under control.
Well, from these observations, you can conclude pretty quickly, pretty easily, what policies are going to be. You can almost spell them out. So in the case of an oil-rich country with a reliable, obedient dictator, they’re given free rein. Saudi Arabia is the most important. There were—it’s the most repressive, extremist, strongest center of Islamic fundamentalism, missionaries who spread ultra-radical Islamism from jihadis and so on. But they’re obedient, they’re reliable, so they can do what they like. There was a planned protest in Saudi Arabia. The police presence was so overwhelming and intimidating that literally nobody even was willing to show up in the streets of Riyadh. But that was fine. The same in Kuwait. There was a small demonstration, very quickly crushed, no comment.
Actually, the most interesting case in many respects is Bahrain. Bahrain is quite important for two reasons. One reason, which has been reported, is that it’s the home port of the U.S. Fifth Fleet, major military force in the region. Another more fundamental reason is that Bahrain is about 70 percent Shiite, and it’s right across the causeway from eastern Saudi Arabia, which also is majority Shiite and happens to be where most of Saudi oil is. Saudi Arabia, of course, is the main energy resource, has been since the '40s. By curious accident of history and geography, the world's major energy resources are located pretty much in Shiite regions. They’re a minority in the Middle East, but they happen to be where the oil is, right around the northern part of the Gulf. That’s eastern Saudi Arabia, southern Iraq and southwestern Iran. And there’s been a concern among planners for a long time that there might be a move towards some sort of tacit alliance in these Shiite regions moving towards independence and controlling the bulk of the world’s oil. That’s obviously intolerable.
So, going back to Bahrain, there was an uprising, tent city in the central square, like Tahrir Square. The Saudi-led military forces invaded Bahrain, giving the security forces there the opportunity to crush it violently, destroyed the tent city, even destroyed the Pearl, which is the symbol of Bahrain; invaded the major hospital complex, threw out the patients and the doctors; been regularly, every day, arresting human rights activists, torturing them, occasionally a sort of a pat on the wrist, but nothing much. That’s very much the Carothers principle. If actions correspond to our strategic and economic objectives, that’s OK. We can have elegant rhetoric, but what matters is facts.
Well, that’s the oil-rich obedient dictators. What about Egypt, most important country, but not a center of—major center of oil production? Well, in Egypt and Tunisia and other countries of that category, there is a game plan, which is employed routinely, so commonly it takes virtual genius not to perceive it. But when you have a favored dictator—for those of you who might think of going into the diplomatic service, you might as well learn it—when there’s a favored dictator and he’s getting into trouble, support him as long as possible, full support as long as possible. When it becomes impossible to support him—like, say, maybe the army turns against him, business class turns against him—then send him off somewhere, issue ringing declarations about your love of democracy, and then try to restore the old regime, maybe with new names. And that’s done over and over again. It doesn’t always work, but it’s always tried—Somoza, Nicaragua; Shah in Iran; Marcos in the Philippines; Duvalier in Haiti; Chun in South Korea; Mobutu in the Congo; Ceausescu is one of Western favorites in Romania; Suharto in Indonesia. It’s completely routine. And that’s exactly what’s going on in Egypt and Tunisia. OK, we support them right to the end—Mubarak in Egypt, right to the end, keep supporting him. Doesn’t work any longer, send him off to Sharm el-Sheikh, pull out the rhetoric, try to restore the old regime. That’s, in fact, what the conflict is about right now. As Amy said, we don’t know where it’s going to turn now, but that’s what’s going on.
Well, there’s another category. The other category is an oil-rich dictator who’s not reliable, who’s a loose cannon. That’s Libya. And there, there’s a different policy: try to get a more reliable dictator. And that’s exactly what’s happening. Of course, describe it as a humanitarian intervention. That’s another near historical universal. You check history, virtually every resort to force, by whoever it is, is accompanied by the most noble rhetoric. It’s all completely humanitarian. That includes Hitler taking over Czechoslovakia, the Japanese fascists rampaging in northeast China. In fact, it’s Mussolini in Ethiopia. There’s hardly any exceptions. So you produce that, and the media and commentators present—pretend they don’t notice that it has no—carries no information, because it’s reflexive.
And then—but in this case, they could also add something else, which has been repeated over and over again, namely, the U.S. and its allies were intervening in response to a request by the Arab League. And, of course, we have to recognize the importance of that. Incidentally, the response from the Arab League was tepid and was pretty soon rescinded, because they didn’t like what we were doing. But put that aside. At the very same time, the Arab League produced—issued another request. Here’s a headline from a newspaper: "Arab League Calls for Gaza No-Fly Zone." Actually, I’m quoting from the London Financial Times. That wasn’t reported in the United States. Well, to be precise, it was reported in the Washington Times, but basically blocked in the U.S., like the polls, like the polls of Arab public opinion, not the right kind of news. So, "Arab League Calls for Gaza No-Fly Zone," that’s inconsistent with U.S. policy, so that, we don’t have to honor and observe, and that disappeared.
Now, there are some polls that are reported. So here’s one from the New York Times a couple days ago. I’ll quote it. It said, "The poll found that a majority of Egyptians want to annul the 1979 peace treaty with Israel that has been a cornerstone of Egyptian foreign policy and the region’s stability." Actually, that’s not quite accurate. It’s been a cornerstone of the region’s instability, and that’s exactly why the Egyptian population wants to abandon it. The agreement essentially eliminated Egypt from the Israel-Arab conflict. That means eliminated the only deterrent to Israeli military action. And it freed up Israel to expand its operations—illegal operations—in the Occupied Territories and to attack its northern neighbor, to attack Lebanon. Shortly after, Israel attacked Lebanon, killed 20,000 people, destroyed southern Lebanon, tried to impose a client regime, didn’t quite make it. And that was understood. So the immediate reaction to the peace treaty in Israel was that there are things about it we don’t like—we’re going to have to abandon our settlements in the Sinai, in the Egyptian Sinai. But it has a good side, too, because now the only deterrent is gone; we can use force and violence to achieve our other goals. And that’s exactly what happened. And that’s exactly why the Egyptian population is opposed to it. They understand that, as does everyone in the region.
On the other hand, the Times wasn’t lying when they said that it led to the region’s stability. And the reason is because of the meaning of the word "stability" as a technical meaning. Stability is—it’s kind of like democracy. Stability means conformity to our interests. So, for example, when Iran tries to expand its influence in Afghanistan and Iraq, neighboring countries, that’s called "destabilizing." It’s part of the threat of Iran. It’s destabilizing the region. On the other hand, when the U.S. invades those countries, occupies them, half destroys them, that’s to achieve stability. And that is very common, even to the point where it’s possible to write—former editor of Foreign Affairs—that when the U.S. overthrew the democratic government in Chile and instituted a vicious dictatorship, that was because the U.S. had to destabilize Chile to achieve stability. That’s in one sentence, and nobody noticed it, because that’s correct, if you understand the meaning of the word "stability." Yeah, you overthrow a parliamentary government, you install a dictatorship, you invade a country and kill 20,000 people, you invade Iraq and kill hundreds of thousands of people—that’s all bringing about stability. Instability is when anyone gets in the way.
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