Monday, December 28, 2009

Acirema
























My first reaction to reading about the Israeli Defense Forces recent killing of two unarmed Palestinian militants in a raid was judgmental anger. Then I stopped myself for a moment and considered the new fad in American military policy, namely, using unmanned drones to blow up houses full of human beings because they are “plotting” against us. That’s right, think twice before you huddle with your buddies in a hut to talk dirty about the great Satan because the great Satan may well be listening and circling above you in an unmanned drone. This policy is executed here in America within the public sphere and seems to go off without a hitch of moral dilemma. They are terrorists we say, high level terrorists, and sure, sometimes their wives or children are home, but that’s just collateral damage, justified in the name of protecting the American people. One of the most remarkable things about this whole unmanned murder of human beings from the sky thing is the lack of public outcry amongst us. This is a policy that Barack Obama has been accelerating, and we seem to just swallow it as if it is another necessary evil in a broader war to protect the American “way.” But the more we participate in such behavior the less justified we are claiming that we have any legitimate “way” to protect. It’s time to turn the gun, the pen, and the camera back in on ourselves because we are expanding our role as global bad guy with each passing day. I’m glad we are making some progress in moving toward health care for all our citizens here in the USA, but the policies of our country are making each of our lives less valuable. We all have blood on our hands. Safely encapsulated in this FOX News bubble, it’s easy to forget to turn the critical eye on our own behavior, but a quick look at our actions as a country over the last few years will reveal the terrifying fact that we have only further justified the bulls eye they have on us. Since the attacks on September 11th, 2001, when the sympathy of almost the whole world was with us, any higher ground we might have had has been eroded by our own economic and military hubris. It is easy to criticize the policies and actions of a distant nation, like Israel or Uganda, or even Venezuela, because from a distance their actions are on the face of them wrong, yet when those actions are reported from those countries, they are often reported in a matter of fact way which indicates that from within them the actions seem justified. So we have to ask ourselves, how do so many of our actions, matter of fact as they may be from within, appear to the nations of the rest of the world? What does America represent to the rest of the world? It is a bit easier to see how we generally view ourselves as a country. Americans are trained in the meaning of America. We are the city on the hill, the global policeman, protecting the principles of freedom and democracy, equality and justice. As individuals it is hard to know what perception others really have of us, because we are so blinded by our own perception of ourselves. This is also true of nations. We get caught up in our own identity and it becomes difficult to even tell the true from the false. How might the rest of the world perceive the American Nation, and how might that differ from our American National Identity? These are scary questions to ask. We are sold this line about being justified in committing acts that from the outside could easily be discerned as war crimes. When the next attack comes against us on American soil, there will not be more sympathy and shock from around the world, there will be less, because our response to the terrorist attacks of 9/11 have made us worthy of more attacks, not less. Instead of becoming a more peaceful, just, righteous nation, we have become more economically criminal, more terrorist militarily, and less aware intellectually. We have painted a bigger target on ourselves in the international consciousness by living, as a matter of fact, contrary to the ideals of our national identity. Our government policies have, therefore, put us, the American people, at more risk of terror attacks, and have stolen more of our innocence. We have engaged in war, we have done it knowingly, as it has been advertised all over our media, and we have bought it, hook, line, and sinker. So when the war returns to our soil, we should react rationally, not shaking our heads in wonder and asking why, but holding our leadership accountable and not letting them engage in more war in response to war that we have for nine years now been engaged in. If we want to make any progress in ending the violence, ending this cycle of wrongs done to remedy wrongs, eyes for eyes making us all blind, we need to turn away from what they have done to us, and start addressing our own policies and actions as a nation and as a people.

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