Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Inventing Reality

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

A

Sat, 17 Sep 2005 18:34:14 -0500

Inventing Reality

 

 

 

 

http://www.michaelparenti.org/

 

 

from the book

Inventing Reality

by Michael Parenti

published by St. Martin's Press, 1993

 

 

American Virtue and " Anti-Americanism "

 

The press sometimes will criticize US foreign policy as " ill-defined, "

or " overextended, " but never as lacking in virtuous intent. To

maintain this image, the news media say little about the US role in

financing, equipping, training, advising, and directing the repressive

military apparatus that exists in US client states around the world,

little about the mass killings of entire villages, the paramilitary

death squads, the torture and disappearances.

 

The brutality does not go entirely unnoticed. But press reports are

usually sporadic and sparse, rarely doing justice to the endemic

nature of the repression, rarely, if ever, showing how the repression

functions to protect the few rich from the many poor and how it is

linked to US policy. Thus when Time magazine devoted a full-page story

to torture throughout the world, the US came out looking like Snow White.

 

Following the official line, the national media will readily deny that

the United States harbors aggressive intentions against other

governments, and will dismiss such charges by them as just so much

" anti-American " propaganda and as evidence of their aggressive intent

toward us. Or the media will condone the aggressive actions as

necessary for our national security or implicitly accept them as a

given reality needing no justification.

 

For instance, in 1961 Cuban right-wing emigres, trained and financed

by the CIA, invaded Cuba, in the words of one of their leaders, to

overthrow Castro and set up " a provisional government " that " will

restore all properties to the rightful owners. " Reports of the

impending invasion circulated widely throughout Central America, but

in the United States, stories were suppressed by the Associated Press

and United Press International and by all the major networks,

newspapers, and news-weeklies. In an impressively unanimous act of

self-censorship, some seventy-five publications rejected a report

offered by the editors of the Nation in 1960 detailing US preparations

for the invasion. Fidel Castro's accusation that the United States was

planning to invade Cuba was dismissed by the New York Times as

" shrill... anti-American propaganda, " and by Time as Castro's

" continued tawdry little melodrama of invasion. " When Washington broke

diplomatic relations with Cuba in January 1961 (after Castro started

nationalizing US corporate investments and instituting social programs

for the poor), the Times explained, " What snapped U.S. patience was a

new propaganda offensive from Havana charging that the U.S. was

plotting an 'imminent invasion' of Cuba. "

 

Yet, after the Bay of Pigs invasion proved to be something more than a

figment of Castro's anti-Americanism, there was almost a total lack of

media criticism regarding its moral and legal impropriety. Instead,

editorial commentary referred to the disappointing " fiasco " and

" disastrous attempt. " Revelations about the full extent of US

involvement, including the CIA training camp in Guatemala, began to

appear during the post-invasion period in the same press that earlier

had denied such things existed. These retrospective admissions of US

involvement were discussed unapologetically and treated as background

for further moves against Cuba. Perspectives that did not implicitly

assume that US policy was well intentioned and supportive of

democratic interests were excluded from media commentary.

*****

 

The Nonexistence of Imperialism

While Washington policy-makers argue that US overseas intervention is

necessary to protect " our interests, " the press seldom asks what " our

interests " are and who among us is actually served by them. As we have

seen in regard to Nicaragua, Grenada, Panama, Iraq, and other cases,

" defending US interests " usually means imposing a client-state status

on nations that might strike a course independent of, and even

inimical to, global corporate investment. This is rarely the reason

given in the national media. Rather, it is almost always a matter of

" stopping aggression, " or " protecting our national security, " or

punishing leaders who are said to be dictators, drug dealers, or state

terrorists.

 

References may occasionally appear in the press about the great

disparities of wealth and poverty in Third World nations, but US

corporate imperialism is never treated as one of the causes of such

poverty. Indeed, it seems the US press has never heard of US

imperialism. Imperialism, the process by which the dominant interests

of one country expropriate the land, labor, markets, capital, and

natural resources of another, and neo-imperialism, the process of

expropriation that occurs without direct colonization, are both

unmentionables. Anyone who might try to introduce the subject would be

quickly dismissed as " ideological. Media people, like mainstream

academics and others, might recognize that the US went through a brief

imperialist period around the Spanish-American War. And they would

probably acknowledge that ;there once existed ancient Roman

imperialism and nineteenth-century British imperialism and certainly

twentieth-century " Soviet imperialism. " But not many, if any,

mainstream editors and commentators would consider the existence of US

imperialism (or neo-imperialism), let alone entertain criticisms of it.

 

Media commentators, like political leaders, treat corporate investment

as a solution to Third World poverty and indebtedness rather than as a

cause. What US corporations do in the Third World is a story largely

untold. In tiny El Salvador alone, US Steel, Alcoa, Westinghouse,

United Brands, Standard Fruit, Del Monte, Cargill, Procter & Gamble,

Chase Manhattan, Bank of America, First National Bank, Texaco, and at

least twenty-five other major companies reap big profits by paying

Salvadoran workers subsistence wages to produce everything from

aluminum products and baking powder to transformers, computers, and

steel pipes- almost all for export markets and all done without

minimum-wage laws, occupational safety, environmental controls, and

other costly hindrances to capital accumulation. The profits reaped

from the exploitation of a cheap and oppressed labor market in an

impoverished country like El Salvador are much higher than would be

procured in stateside industries. Of the hundreds of reports about El

Salvador in the major broadcast and print media in recent years, few,

if any, treat the basic facts about US economic imperialism. Nor does

the press say much about El Salvador's internal class structure, in

which a small number of immensely rich families own all the best

farmland and receive 50 percent of the nation's income. Nor is much

said about how US military aid is used to maintain this privileged

class system.

 

What capitalism as a transnational system does to impoverish people

throughout the world is simply not a fit subject for the US news

media. Instead, poverty is treated as its own cause. We are asked to

believe that Third World people are poor because that has long been

their condition; they live in countries that are overpopulated, or

there is something about their land, culture, or temperament that

makes them unable to cope. Subsistence wages, forced displacement from

homesteads, the plunder of natural resources, the lack of public

education and public health programs, the suppression of independent

labor unions and other democratic forces by US-supported police

states, such things-if we were to believe the way they remain

untreated in the media-have nothing much to do with poverty in Latin

America, Africa, and Asia.

*****

 

Doing the Third World

Despite a vast diversity of cultures, languages, ethnicity, and

geography, the nations of Latin America, Africa, and Asia, with some

exceptions, show striking similarities in the economic and political

realities they endure. Lumped together under the designation of the

" Third World, " they are characterized by (1) concentrated ownership of

land, labor, capital, natural resources, and technology in the hands

of rich persons and giant multinational corporations; (2) suppressive

military forces financed, trained, equipped, and assisted by the

United States-their function being not to protect the populace from

foreign invasion but to protect the small wealthy owning class and

foreign investors from the populace; (3) the population, aside from a

small middle class, endure impoverishment, high illiteracy rates,

malnutrition, wretched housing, and nonexistent human services.

 

Because of this widespread poverty, these nations have been mistakenly

designated as " underdeveloped " and " poor " when in fact they are

overexploited and the source of great wealth, their resources and

cheap labor serving to enrich investors. Only their people remain poor.

 

For the better part of a century now, successive administrations in

the United States have talked about bringing democracy and economic

advancement to the " less-developed " peoples of the Third World, when

in fact, the overriding goal of US policy toward these countries has

been to prevent alternate social orders from arising, ones that would

use the economy for purposes of social development and for the needs

of the populace, rather than for the capital accumulation process. The

purpose of US policy has been not to defend democracy, in fact,

democracies-as in Iran (1953), Guatemala (1954), Indonesia (1965), and

Chile (1973)- are regularly overthrown if they attempt to initiate

serious economic reforms that tamper with the existing class

structure. The US goal is to make the world safe for multinational

corporate exploitation, to keep things as they are while talking about

the need for change and reform.

 

In all this, the US corporate-owned news media have bee, intentionally

or not, actively complicit.

*****

 

 

 

 

 

Imperialism 101,

Imperial Domination Updated

excerpted from the book

 

Against Empire

The Brutal Realities of U.S. Global Domination

by Michael Parenti

City Lights Books, 1995, paper

 

 

Imperialism 101

 

p7

The impoverished lands of Asia, Africa, and Latin America are known to us as the

" Third World, " to distinguish them from the " First World " of industrialized

Europe and North America and the now largely defunct " Second World " of communist

states. Third World poverty, called " underdevelopment, " is treated by most

Western observers as an original historic condition. We are asked to believe

that it always existed, that poor countries are poor because their lands have

always been infertile or their people unproductive.

 

In fact, the lands of Asia, Africa, and Latin America have long produced great

treasures of foods, minerals, and other natural resources. That is why Europeans

went through so much trouble to steal and plunder them. One does not go to poor

places for self-enrichment. The Third World is rich. Only its people are

poor-and it is because of the pillage they have endured.

 

p10

What is called " underdevelopment " is a set of social relations that has been

forcefully imposed on countries. With the advent of the Western colonizers, the

peoples of the Third World were actually set back in their development,

sometimes for centuries. British imperialism in India provides an instructive

example. In 1810, India was exporting more textiles to England than England was

exporting to India. By 1830, the trade flow was reversed. The British had put up

prohibitive tariff barriers to shut out Indian finished goods and were dumping

their commodities in India, a practice backed by British gunboats and military

force. Within a matter of years, the great textile centers of Dacca and Madras

were turned into ghost towns. The Indians were sent back to the land to raise

the cotton used in British textile factories. In effect, India was reduced to

being a cow milked by British financiers.

 

By 1850, India's debt had grown to £53 million. From 1850 to 1900, its per

capita income dropped by almost two-thirds. The value of the raw materials and

commodities the Indians were obliged to send to Britain during most of the

nineteenth century amounted yearly to more than the total income of the sixty

million Indian agricultural and industrial workers. The massive poverty we

associate with India was not that country's original historical condition.

British imperialism did two things: first, it ended India's development, then it

forcibly underdeveloped that country.

 

Similar bleeding processes occurred throughout the Third World. The enormous

wealth extracted should remind us that there originally were few really poor

nations. Countries like Brazil, Indonesia, Chile, Bolivia, Zaire, Mexico,

Malaysia, and the Philippines were and in some cases still are rich in

resources. Some lands have been so thoroughly plundered as to be desolate in all

respects. However, most of the Third World is not " underdeveloped " but

overexploited. Western colonization and investments have created a lower rather

than a higher living standard.

 

Referring to what the English colonizers did to the Irish, Frederick Engels

wrote in 1856: " How often have the Irish started out to achieve something, and

every time they have been crushed politically and industrially. By consistent

oppression they have been artificially converted into an utterly impoverished

nation. " So with most of the Third World. The Mayan Indians in Guatemala had a

more nutritious and varied diet and better conditions of health in the early

sixteenth century before the Europeans arrived than they have today. They had

more craftspeople, architects, artisans, and horticulturists than today. What is

called underdevelopment is a product of imperialism's superexploitation.

Underdevelopment is itself a development.

 

Imperialism has created what I have termed " maldevelopment " : modern office

buildings and luxury hotels in the capital city instead of housing for the poor,

cosmetic surgery clinics for the affluent instead of hospitals for workers, cash

export crops for agribusiness instead of food for local markets, highways that

go from the mines and latifundios to the refineries and ports instead of roads

in the back country for those who might hope to see a doctor or a teacher.

 

Wealth is transferred from Third World peoples to the economic elites of Europe

and North America (and more recently Japan) by direct plunder, by the

expropriation of natural resources, the imposition of ruinous taxes and land

rents, the payment of poverty wages, and the forced importation of finished

goods at highly inflated prices. The colonized country is denied the freedom of

trade and the opportunity to develop its own natural resources, markets, and

industrial capacity. Self-sustenance and self-employment give way to wage labor.

From 1970 to 1980, the number of wage workers in the Third World grew from 72

million to 120 million, and the rate is accelerating.

 

p13

When we say a country is " underdeveloped, " we are implying that it is backward

and retarded in some way, that its people have shown little capacity to achieve

and evolve. The negative connotations of " underdeveloped " have caused the United

Nations, the Wall Street Journal, and parties of various political persuasions

to refer to

 

Third World countries as " developing " nations, a term somewhat less insulting

than " underdeveloped " but equally misleading. I prefer to use " Third World "

because " developing " seems to be just a euphemistic way of saying

" underdeveloped but belatedly starting to do something about it. " It still

implies that poverty was an original historic condition and not something

imposed by imperialists. It also falsely suggests that these countries are

developing when actually their economic conditions are usually worsening.

 

The dominant theory of the last half century, enunciated repeatedly by writers

like Barbara Ward and W. W. Rostow and afforded wide currency, maintains that it

is up to the rich nations of the North to help uplift the " backward " nations of

the South, bringing them technology and proper work habits. This is an updated

version of " the white man's burden, " a favorite imperialist fantasy.

According to the development scenario, with the introduction of Western

investments, workers in the poor nations will find more productive employment in

the modern sector at higher wages. As capital accumulates, business will

reinvest its profits, thus creating still more products, jobs, buying power, and

markets. Eventually a more prosperous economy evolves.

 

This " development theory " or " modernization theory, " as it is sometimes called,

bears little relation to reality. What has emerged in the Third World is an

intensely exploitive form of dependent capitalism. Economic conditions have

worsened drastically with the growth of transnational corporate investment. The

problem is not poor lands or unproductive populations but foreign exploitation

and class inequality. Investors go into a country not to uplift it but to enrich

themselves.

 

p16

After World War II, European powers like Britain and France adopted a strategy

of neoimperialism. Financially depleted by years of warfare, and facing

intensified popular resistance from within the Third World itself, they

reluctantly decided that indirect economic hegemony was less costly and

politically more expedient than outright colonial rule. They discovered that the

removal of a conspicuously intrusive colonial rule made it more difficult for

nationalist elements within the previously colonized countries to mobilize

antiimperialist sentiments.

 

Though the newly established government might be far from completely

independent, it usually enjoyed more legitimacy in the eyes of its populace than

a colonial administration controlled by the imperial power. Furthermore, under

neoimperialism the native government takes up the costs of administering the

country while the imperialist interests are free to concentrate on accumulating

capital, which is all they really want to do.

 

After years of colonialism, the Third World country finds it extremely difficult

to extricate itself from the unequal relationship with its former colonizer and

impossible to depart from the global capitalist sphere. Those countries that try

to make a break are subjected to punishing economic and military treatment by

one or another major power, nowadays usually the United States.

 

The leaders of the new nations may voice revolutionary slogans, yet they find

themselves locked into the global capitalist orbit, cooperating perforce with

the First World nations for investment, trade, and aid. So we witnessed the

curious phenomenon of leaders of newly independent Third World nations

denouncing imperialism as the source of their countries' ills, while dissidents

in these countries denounced these same leaders as collaborators of imperialism.

 

In many instances a comprador class emerged or was installed as a first

condition for independence. A comprador class is one that cooperates in turning

its own country into a client state for foreign interests. A client state is one

that is open to investments on terms that are decidedly favorable to the foreign

investors. In a client state, corporate investors enjoy direct subsidies and

land grants, access to raw materials and cheap labor, light or nonexistent

taxes, few effective labor unions, no minimum wage or child labor or

occupational safety laws, and no consumer or environmental protections to speak

of. The protective laws that do exist go largely unenforced.

 

In all, the Third World is something of a capitalist paradise, offering life as

it was in Europe and the United States during the nineteenth century, with a

rate of profit vastly higher than what might be earned today in a country with

strong economic regulations. The comprador class is well recompensed for its

cooperation. Its leaders enjoy opportunities to line their pockets with the

foreign aid sent by the U.S. government. Stability is assured with the

establishment of security forces, armed and trained by the United States in the

latest technologies of terror and repression.

 

p17

The economy of Third World nations typically is concentrated on exporting a few

raw materials or labor-intensive commodities. Since it is such a buyer's market,

a poor nation finds itself in acute competition with other impoverished nations

for the markets of more prosperous industrial countries. The latter are able to

set trading terms that are highly favorable to themselves, playing one poor

country off against another.

 

Imperial Domination Updated

 

p19

Third World countries are underpaid for their exports and regularly overcharged

for the goods they import from the industrial world. Thus, their coffee, cotton,

meat, tin, copper, and oil are sold to foreign corporations at low prices in

order to obtain-at painfully high prices-various manufactured goods, machinery,

and spare parts. According to a former president of Venezuela, Carlos Andrés

Perez: " This has resulted in a constant and growing outflow of capital and

impoverishment of our countries. "

 

p19

in many poor countries over half the manufacturing assets are owned or

controlled by foreign companies. Even in instances when the multinationals have

only a minority interest, they often retain a veto control. Even when the host

nation owns the enterprise in its entirety, the multinationals will enjoy

benefits through their near-monopoly of technology and international marketing.

Such is the case with oil, an industry in which the giant companies own only

about 38 percent of the world's crude petroleum production but control almost

all the refining capacity and distribution.

Given these disadvantageous trade and investment relations, Third World nations

have found it expedient to borrow heavily from Western banks and from the

International Monetary Fund (IMF), which is controlled by the United States and

other Western member-nations. By the 1990s, the Third World debt was approaching

$2 trillion, an unpayable sum. The greater a nation's debt, the greater the

pressure to borrow still more to meet deficits-often at still higher interest

rates and on tighter payment terms.

 

An increasingly large portion of the earnings of indebted nations goes to

servicing the debt, leaving still less for domestic consumption. The debts of

some nations have grown so enormous that the interest accumulates faster than

payments can be met. The debt develops a self-feeding momentum of its own,

consuming more and more of the debtor nation's wealth.

 

p22

A key instrument of class-biased aid is the World Bank, an interlocking,

international consortium of bankers and economists who spend billions of

dollars-much of it from U.S. taxpayers-to finance projects that shore up

repressive right-wing regimes and subsidize corporate investors at the expense

of the poor and the environment.

 

p25

Terror remains one of the common instruments of imperialist domination. With the

financial and technical assistance of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)

and other such units, military and security police throughout various client

states are schooled in the fine arts of surveillance, interrogation, torture,

intimidation, and assassination. The U.S. Army School of the Americas (SOA) at

Fort Benning, Georgia, known throughout Latin America as the, " School of

Assassins, " trains military officers from U.S. client states in the Iatest

methods of repression. In a country like El Salvador, a majority y of the

officers implicated in village massacres and other atrocities are SOA graduates.

 

p25

In procapitalist countries like El Salvador and Guatemala, the U.S. national

security state is on the side of the government, rendering indispensable

counterinsurgency assistance in order to suppress popular liberation forces. By

the " US. national security state " I mean to the Executive Office of the White

House, the National Security Council (NSC), National Security Administration,

Central Intelligence Agency, Pentagon, Federal Bureau of Investigation, and

other such units that are engaged in surveillance, suppression, covert action,

and forceful interventions abroad and at home.

 

p26

Military force is in even greater evidence today than during the era of colonial

conquest and occupation. The United States maintains the most powerful military

machine on earth. Its supposed purpose was to protect democracy from communist

aggression, but the U.S. military's actual mission-as demonstrated in Vietnam,

Cambodia Laos Lebanon, the Dominican Republic, Grenada, and Panama-has been not

to ward off Russian or Cuban invasions but to prevent indigenous anticapitalist,

revolutionary or populist-nationalist governments from prevailing.

U.S. military force is also applied indirectly, by sponsoring Third World

armies, gendarmerie, and intelligence and security units including death squads.

Their purpose is not to safeguard their autocratic governments from a

nonexistent communist invasion but to suppress and terrorize rebellious elements

within their own populations or in adjacent countries ...

 

p27

.... the CIA personnel who devise ... violent programs do not consider themselves

involved in anything less noble than the defense of U.S. interests abroad. They

may admit that certain of their methods are unsavory but they are quick to point

out the necessity of fighting fire with fire, emphasizing that a communist

victory is a far greater evil than whatever repressive expediencies they are

compelled to utilize. So they justify their crimes by saying that their victims

are criminals. The national security warriors do not support torturers and death

squads arbitrarily, but as part of a process of extermination and repression in

defense of specific politico-economic interests.

 

p28

The state must protect not only the overseas investments of particular firms but

the entire capital accumulation process itself. This entails the systematic

suppression of revolutionary and populist-nationalist movements that seek to

build alternative economic systems along more egalitarian, collectivist lines.

 

p28

It was with domestic opinion in mind that the U.S. imperialists developed the

method of " low intensity conflict " to wreak death and destruction upon countries

or guerrilla movements that pursued an alternative course of development. This

approach recognizes that Third World guerrilla forces have seldom, if ever, been

able to achieve all-out military victory over the occupying army of an

industrial power or its comprador army. The best the guerrillas can hope to do

is wage a war of attrition, depriving the imperialist country of a final

victory, until the latter's own population grows weary of the costs and begins

to challenge the overseas commitment. The war then becomes politically too

costly for the imperialists to prosecute.

 

p29

To avoid stirring up ... political opposition at home, Washington policymakers

have developed the technique of low intensity conflict, a mode of warfare that

avoids all-out, high-visibility, military engagements and thereby minimizes the

use and loss of U.S. military personnel. A low-intensity war is a proxy war,

using ' the mercenary troops of the U.S.-backed Third World government. With

Washington providing military trainers and advisers, superior firepower,

surveillance and communications assistance, and generous funds, these forces are

able to persist indefinitely, destroying a little at a time, with quick sorties

into the countryside and death squad assassinations in the cities and villages.

They forgo an all-out sweep against guerrilla forces that is likely to fall

short of victory and invite criticism of its futility and savagery.

 

The war pursued by the Reagan and Bush administrations against Nicaragua was

prosecuted for almost a decade. The counterinsurgency war in El Salvador lasted

over fifteen years; in the Philippines over twenty years; in Colombia, over

thirty years; and in Guatemala, thirty-five years. Once low-intensity conflict

is adopted there are no more big massacres, no massive military engagements, no

dramatic victories or dramatic setbacks, no Dienbienphu or Tet Offensive.

 

The U.S. public is not galvanized to opposition because not much seems to be

happening and the intervention drops from the news. Like the guerrillas

themselves, the interventionists pursue a war of attrition but against the

people rather than with their support. Their purpose is to demonstrate that they

have endless time and resources, that they will be able to outlast the guerrilla

forces not only militarily, but also politically, because there is now scant

pressure for withdraw from their own populace back home.

 

p31

Among the recent undertakings by politico-economic elites are the North American

Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the 1993 Uruguayan Round of the General

Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), which represent attempts to circumvent

the sovereignty of nation-states in favor of the transnational corporations. As

presented to the public, NAFTA and GATT will break down tariff walls, integrate

national economies into a global system, and benefit the peoples of all nations

with increased trade. This " globalization " process is treated as a benign and

natural historical development that supposedly has taken us from regional to

national and now to international market relations.

 

p32

The GATT agreements create a World Trade Organization (WTO), an international

association of over 120 signatory nations, with the same legal status as the

United Nations. WTO has the authority to prevent, overrule, or dilute the

environmental, social, consumer, and labor laws of any nation. It sets up panels

composed of nonelected trade specialists who act as judges over economic issues,

placing them beyond the reach of national sovereignty and popular control,

thereby ensuring that community interests will be subordinated to finance

capital.

 

p33

Generally, GATT advances the massive corporate acquisition of publicly owned

property and the holdings of local owners and worker collectives. Deprived of

tariff protections, many small family farms in North America and Europe will go

under, and the self-sufficient village agricultural economies of much of Asia

and Africa will be destroyed. As Kim Moody notes, " Third World peasant producers

will be driven from the land by the millions, as is already happening in Mexico

[under NAFTA]. "

 

We are told that to remain competitive under GATT, we in North America will have

to increase our productivity while reducing our labor and production costs. We

will have to spend less on social services and introduce more wage concessions,

more restructuring, deregulation, and privatization. Only then might we cope

with the impersonal forces sweeping us along. In fact, there is nothing

impersonal about these forces. GATT was consciously planned by business and

governmental elites over a period of years, by interests that have explicitly

pursued a deregulated world economy and have opposed all democratic checks upon

business practices.

 

p34

Over the last two decades, in Latin America, Asia, and even in Europe and North

America, conservative forces have pushed hard to take publicly owned

not-for-profit industries and services (mines, factories, oil wells, banks,

railroads, telephone companies, utilities, television systems, postal services,

health care, and insurance firms) and sell them off at bargain prices to private

interests to be operated for profit.

 

p35

Designed to leave the world's economic destiny to the tender mercy of bankers

and multinational corporations, globalization is a logical extension of

imperialism, a victory of empire over republic, international finance capital

over democracy.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...