Interview by Thom Hartmann
www.OpEdNews.com
[Thom Hartmann] George Galloway!
[Thom Hartmann] Thom Hartmann here with you
on AM 620 KPOJ in Portland and we're also going to
record this and play it on our national program.
Thanks so much, Mr. Galloway for being with us
today.
[George Galloway] You're most welcome.
[Thom Hartmann] First of all, my apologies if
I have your title wrong. I'm calling you mister. Is
that how?
[George Galloway] Mister, mister's more than
adequate.
[Thom Hartmann] OK. I'm wondering, what is
your opinion on the legality of Guantanamo Bay and
what do you think of the construction of a death
chamber there, which was reported by the BBC
yesterday?
[George Galloway] Well, it's an utterly
illegal process which is being followed. People are
being taken, in some cases from third countries. One
of the British citizens, for example, was taken from
the Gambia. Others have been taken from Pakistan.
Others still from, from Afghanistan. They're taken
by force, drugs forcibly injected into them, hooded,
chained, and taken to a cage in the tropics where by
all accounts they're being kept in conditions that
you wouldn't keep a dog in in your country or mine.
And if you did, you'd be, you'd be had up for
cruelty by the authorities.
And then there's very clear evidence of systematic
torture. There's the desecration of the Koran which
may or may not have happened, depending on which
edition of Newsweek you are prepared to believe.
This is a big scar on the face of the United States.
And it seems to me that too few citizens of the
United States have fastened on to the fact that the
protestations by your president and your government
of being interested in human rights and democracy
and freedom are quite negated by the very existence
of Guantanamo Bay.
But of course, that's not the end of it. Bagram Air
Base is exactly the same kind of place. Abu Ghraib
prison, well we perhaps, on a family show, shouldn't
probe too deeply into the disgusting obscenities
that were going on there. And, it turns out, that
where the United States itself is not prepared to
physically torture people, it merely subcontracts
out the task; sending people to the likes of
Uzbekistan and Egypt and other prison states where
less squeamish governments will torture people for
the United States and give the U.S. the testimony
they get as a result. Which, of course, it goes
without saying, is almost never of any use because
anyone will say anything under torture.
[Thom Hartmann] Yeah.
[George Galloway] And all sorts of wild goose
chases are no doubt embarked upon as a result of all
this. So I'm afraid Guantanamo is a blot on the
landscape and the fact that the United States
occupies it in Cuba without Cuba's agreement is just
the icing on the cake.
[Thom Hartmann] Yeah. George Galloway, Member
of Parliament in the, in Great Britain, of the House
of Commons. Why do you believe that Tony Blair
decided to join president Bush in waging war when,
as has recently emerged with this Downing Street
memo, he knew that the case was flimsy, and do you
think that either Blair or Bush or people in their
administration should be prosecuted on any, on any
level for this activity?
[George Galloway] Well, first of all I am
sure that they will not be prosecuted, because it is
only losers that are prosecuted. In the
international system that we have there's no chance
of the likes of Henry Kissinger, for example, the
greatest living war criminal in the world today with
the blood of millions of people in Vietnam and
Cambodia and Laos and Chile and East Timor or in
many other places on his hands. He will never appear
in a court or be behind bars. That's for the tin pot
tyrants, the tiny tyrants like Milosevic; they get
sent there. The big tyrants never face justice.
I wish I knew the answer to your first question, why
did Tony Blair join it? Certainly, it's been utterly
ruinous to his political reputation. He will, he
will be followed into the history books and into the
grave with this mark of Cain on his forehead. He
will be remembered for nothing other than that he
followed George W. Bush over a cliff; took the rest
of us with them, and we haven't yet reached the
bottom, I'm afraid. All I can say from my own
conversations with Mr. Blair, man to man, are that I
think that both him and George W. Bush are possessed
of a kind of messianic belief that somebody, God
perhaps, gave them the job of shouldering the white
man's burden, which is the world. That someone gave
them the right to step outside of international law;
go anywhere, do anything, pay any price in other
people's blood, to reshape the world in their image;
in the image that they want to see. And I think that
both men will be damned in history. Both men have
made their respective countries the two most hated
countries in the world. They have endangered the
lives and safety of our citizens. They have damaged
our economic and cultural and social interests, and
they should face prosecution, but never will.
[Thom Hartmann] Mr. Galloway, you called for
a police inquiry into ballot fraud and ghost voting
in Bethnal Green and Bow. In America, now, we just
have this, just recently released, Congressman John
Conyers went to Ohio and held hearings, 13 or 12
members of Congress, several weeks of hearings under
oath, and determined that there was considerable
election fraud in this last election where George
Bush became president. And of course we know now
that, in fact it was first reported on the BBC -
Americans didn't know it but, but folks in the UK
knew - within weeks of the 2000 election, that
George Bush's brother Jeb and Kathleen Harris in
Florida had conspired to remove the names of
thousands of legally registered, tens of thousands
of legally registered African Americans - largely
Democratic voters - from the rolls there in Florida.
What do you think is the solution to making
elections, both in the United States and the United
Kingdom, and around the world for that matter, open,
fair and accurate?
[George Galloway] Well, you know, we're used
to sending observers to third world countries and
former banana republics to observe their elections.
But the British election recently, and your election
just a little more distantly, and the one in 2000
for that matter, really, if they had been observed
by third world observers would have been declared
bogus and deeply flawed.
Your president stole the presidency in Florida using
his brother and his brother's close friends to cheat
the people of the United States out of their freely
elected president who was undoubtedly Al Gore. Even
if you only counted the votes that actually made it
through the hoops in order to be cast, the president
was really Al Gore. And in Ohio, and I've read the
stuff that Congressman Conyers is doing and I
commend it, it's clear enough on the face of it that
there was substantial fraud in that state and thus
delivering the Electoral College vote for president
Bush.
In our country, the government have vastly inflated
the number of people voting by post which, as the
courts have found, is wide open to electoral fraud,
and electoral fraud there has been. I don't need to
deal with the allegations, which are in their
thousands. I can just deal with the cases that have
already been dealt with. Six new Labour councillors
were struck off and thrown out of the council in
Birmingham, which is Britain's second city, having
been caught red-handed in a room around a table at
the dead of night, at midnight, with thousands, and
I mean thousands, of other people's ballot papers
that they were happily filling in, and they are now
facing criminal prosecution as a result. Another new
Labour councillor in the town of Blackburn, where
the Foreign Secretary Jack Straw represents, and he
was a close associate of Jack Straw, and he was a 65
or 67 year old man, has just been sent to prison for
three and a half years for having been caught
red-handed doing exactly the same thing.
When you add the thousands of allegations that there
now are of voter fraud in the last election then
I've called for the police to move in en masse,
because we are heading down the road towards a kind
of corruption that we never thought we'd see.
Perhaps it's an innate sense of democratic
superiority on our part. We use to think that that
kind of ballot-rigging and voter fraud was something
that happened in other countries, not in the mother
of democracies, Great Britain.
[Thom Hartmann] Now this was a vote by mail
problems that you had in the UK. Here in Oregon, we
have the only vote by mail system in the state and I
think we always thought that it was impregnable. It
was, it was immune to this sort of thing.
[George Galloway] Well, yours may be, yours
may be. Ours is very far from that. And when the
electoral rolls are in the state that they are in...
In my own constituency, for example, there were no
less than 14 voters registered in one flat in Brick
Lane, which is a heavily Asian, Bengali area, a
Bangladeshi area in my constituency, and when we
went there, not only were there not 14 voters living
there, which would have been odd in any case given
the size of the apartments, but there were no voters
living there. Indeed, there was no one living there,
it was utterly derelict. Now, somebody registered
them and many hundreds, maybe even thousands of
others for votes that they would cast by post who
simply didn't exist. And of course, the scam is that
someone picks up the ballot papers when they are
posted out by the authority, fills them in and
returns them.
[Thom Hartmann] Yeah. George Galloway, Member
of Parliament, Member of the House of Commons in the
United Kingdom. What lessons have you learned, if I
can change the topic just for a moment to economics,
and then if you have another moment,
[George Galloway] Of course.
[Thom Hartmann] I'd like to get back to the
loss of freedoms in the wake of 9/11, but I'm
curious about privatization in the UK. It's all the
rage in the United States. I was over there when you
were privatizing your railroads, could you speak to
the citizens of America about the dangers of
privatization, please?
[George Galloway] Well, what a way to run a
railroad! That's what most people in the country are
saying now, and how's this for a turnaround? British
Rail, which was owned by the state, which was a
nationalized railway, was probably the least loved
institution in the United Kingdom when Mrs. Thatcher
privatized it. Now, fully 80% of the people of the
country, 80, eight zero percent of the people of the
country want the railways taken back into public
ownership because they realize now that we're paying
three times the subsidy to the private owners of the
privatized railways that we were paying to the
nationalized railways and we've got a dirtier, more
dangerous, and more expensive service as a result.
It takes longer now to go from London to Birmingham
on the train than it does to go from where I'm
sitting in the House of Commons to the Eiffel Tower
in Paris, and it's only 110 miles from London to
Birmingham. We've had a whole series of railway
disasters caused by people cutting corners to save
costs, to make more profits. We've had delays that
would make your hair stand on end; people in the
depths of winter being delayed 5, 7 hours on railway
journeys, and we have rolling stock which has not
improved since the public sector days. All that's
happening is that we're giving huge state subsidies
to private owners who are putting it in their
pockets.
[Thom Hartmann] Yeah.
[George Galloway] Now, we are the only
country in the whole world that privatized our Air
Traffic Control space; even the United States did
not do that.
[Thom Hartmann] We're talking about it here.
[George Galloway] Yes, you're talking about
it. Mr. Blair was ahead of you. He was ahead of Mrs.
Thatcher, who wouldn't have dreamt of any such
reckless measure. And we've now handed over control
of our Air Traffic Control space to people whose
primary responsibility, who's very legal and
fiduciary duty is to use their investment to make a
profit for their shareholders. That's got to be
legally their first priority; to make a profit for
their shareholders.
Now, just like an equally deadly privatization,
though it doesn't sound like it, it might sound
banal, when we privatized the cleaning services in
hospitals, we immediately passed on to companies a
duty not primarily to keep the hospitals clean, but
primarily to make a profit for their shareholders.
The result has been an explosion, a veritable
explosion, in re-infection rates; so-called MRSA
which is a kind of super bug mutant, which is
actually killing 10,000 people a year in Britain.
And there are many hospitals, including the one in
my own constituency, miscalled the Royal London
Hospital, though you'd never find a member of the
royal family in it, I can assure you, where you're
as likely to come out sick as you are to come out
cured because of the state of the cleaning services
in the hospitals. And that's directly linked to the
privatization of that service.
So I say to the people of the United States that the
rest of the world is falling out of love with
privatization. Some things are too important to be
left to the private sector. And just as some things
are too important or specialized to be left to the
public sector, nobody's saying that every cafe or
fish and chip shop on the corner should be owned by
the state - that would be absurd. But there are some
things like Air Traffic Control, like national
railway networks, like the cleaning of hospitals,
like the teaching of our children in schools which
are too important to be left to people who are doing
it for profit.
[Thom Hartmann] Well said, and in fact,
Senator Bill Frist, the fellow who's leading the
United States Senate now, his family fortune was
built on hospitals, previously public hospitals
being made private, and we're seeing the
consequences of that in the United States with
exploding health care costs and other problems.
[George Galloway] Yes. Well we say here - it
might be a little unfair - we say here that if you
fall down in the United States, the ambulance man
must feel for your wallet before he feels for your
pulse.
[Thom Hartmann] Yes, and to some extent it
actually is true. My last question for you is sort
of a two part here. I know you have to get back to
the work you're doing and I very much appreciate you
spending your time with us, sir.
[George Galloway] You're welcome.
[Thom Hartmann] First of all, Senator Norman
Coleman, whose committee you testified before and to
whom you spoke the week before last, as I recall, or
last week - recently. There are reports, which I've
been unable to absolutely confirm, but apparently,
from the searches of the senate web site, it looks
like your testimony has disappeared from the record.
[George Galloway] That's right.
[Thom Hartmann] Do you know about that, and
what are your thoughts on that?
[George Galloway] It has been. It has been.
It has been airbrushed from the, from the record.
And in a way, if you saw the testimony, you'll know
why. Because what I managed to do, and I thank God
for the breath that he gave me to do it, was blow
away the smokescreen that these people are trying to
throw up to divert attention from the very real
crimes, high crimes and misdemeanors that they
themselves are responsible for. And I've had, and
I'm not exaggerating this, more than 12,000 emails
from the United States. 12,000 emails, and it's not
easy in the United States to find out the email
address of a British parliamentarian.
[Thom Hartmann] Yeah.
[George Galloway] And these people have all
written to me. Many of them have drawn attention to
the fact that although for one day, just 24 hours,
my testimony was on the web site it has now been
wiped off it. And that tells you all you need to
know, really, about the quality of the commitment to
democracy and open government that these people
really have as opposed to the talk that they talk.
[Thom Hartmann] Well, and finally, with
regard to democracy, what do you see the problem
with the new laws we're debating, enhancing actually
the so-called Patriot Act here in the United States.
I know you have these kinds of things going on in
the UK, the curtailment of freedoms, the loss of
liberties in the wake of 9/11. I'm assuming that
you've probably seen the Power of Nightmares, the
BBC documentary which nobody in the United States
has seen. Do you think that these changes are
necessary or useful? What's your, what's your
opinion of this?
[George Galloway] Well I'm afraid I'm an
advocate of the great Dr. Johnson, the English man
of letters who said that patriotism was the last
refuge of the scoundrel. He didn't mean, of course,
the patriotism which is a noble, genuine love for
what's best about your country and its beauty and
its achievements and so on, but those who wrap
themselves in flags and blow the tinny trumpet of
patriotism as a means of fooling the people. As a
means of getting them to fall in behind the colours
and march off to ignoble wars; wars of conquest,
wars of aggression, wars for exploitation.
And that's what I think this Patriot Act is all
about. It's about fooling the American people into
believing that if you just arm the state with enough
fly swats you'll be able to whack away all the
beasts that are coming your way. But the truth is,
these mosquitoes are coming out of a swamp; a very
real swamp of grievance, of bitterness and hatred at
our injustice and at the policies that we are
following. And unless we drain that swamp by
reversing the policies of injustice that have
germinated this threat then it doesn't matter how
many Patriot Acts you pass, it doesn't matter how
many fly swats you hand out, how many mosquito nets
you wrap yourself in, you're not going to be able to
stop them hurting us again.
[Thom Hartmann] Yeah. Well said. Mr. George
Galloway, thank you so much for sharing your time
with us today.
[George Galloway] You're welcome. Any time.
[Thom Hartmann] I do appreciate it. I truly
appreciate it.
[George Galloway] Thanks.
[Thom Hartmann] Thank you very much for being
here on the Thom Hartmann program.
[George Galloway] Bye
Reprinted from Common Dreams:
http://www.commondreams.org/views05/0528-27.htm
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