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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: gao seng who wrote (216383)1/9/2002 9:31:13 PM
From: gao seng  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
Enemies within

Thomas Sowell

newsandopinion.com -- OUR war against terrorism is
just a few months old, but already we have had two well-
publicized young American traitors. One was captured fighting
for the Taliban in Afghanistan and the other deliberately flew
a plane into a building in Florida, leaving behind a note in
support of the Taliban.

These are more than just isolated individuals. Other Americans
who have not gone so far have nevertheless rejoiced at our
tragedy in public statements on college campuses around the
country and still others have hastened to blame us for bringing
the September 11th attacks on ourselves.

A former President of the United States has depicted the
terrorist attacks against Americans as somehow due to slavery
and past wars of conquest against the Indians. And he was
applauded at one of our most prestigious universities for
saying it.

Nothing like this happened during World War II. Even those who
had grievances knew, as Joe Louis put it, "There's nothing
wrong with this country that Hitler is going to cure."

But just putting the issue in those terms was radically
different from the mindset that pervades much of our
educational system, the media, and the intelligentsia today.
Too many people today compare the United States, not to other
countries, but to their own ideals.

No country can pass that test -- if only because some people's
ideals conflict with other people's ideals. Even the same
person has some ideals that cannot be realized along with his
other ideals.

What this means is that the most privileged people, living in
the freest and most prosperous country on earth, can go around
discontented. Worse, they can turn to some foreign country or
foreign ideology as embodying what they want, even if they know
pathetically little about what such countries are really like
and what such ideas have actually led to.

Most Americans today of course remain loyal and patriotic. But
they also remain largely unaware of the anti-American bias of
our own educational establishment and the classroom
brainwashing of whole generations of young Americans by people
who glory in considering themselves agents of "change."

Such a bias toward generic "change" might make sense in a
bloody dictatorship, where almost any change would be for the
better. But what sense does it make in a country whose existing
institutions and traditions have produced far more freedom and
prosperity than any of the alternatives that have been tried
around the world?

Many of those who run our education establishment, and those
who control what we are told by the media, are not interested
in having the next generation understand the benefits they have
inherited from American and Western institutions and
traditions. Instead, the whole orientation is that of compiling
grievances to complain about, often combined with a sanitized
and romanticized vision of the glories of other countries and
cultures.

Do you wonder that some of the young succumb -- some
tragically? The history of the 20th century is full of examples
of treason by privileged people in free countries, on behalf of
totalitarian dictatorships that murdered millions in cold
blood.

Just think of the American and British traitors who stole
nuclear secrets and turned them over to the Stalinist
dictatorship, which had slaughtered more of its own people than
Hitler killed in the Holocaust. Many of these were "the
brightest and the best" -- or at least the most self-
infatuated.

While we are rightly concerned about enemy aliens in our midst,
the deeper and longer lasting problem of alienated Americans
may be more dangerous and harder to solve. Conceivably, we may
someday get around to tightening our recklessly loose
immigration policies and practices. But we cannot expel our
homegrown enemies within.

We have rightly been concerned about the educational failures
of our schools. But that may turn out in the end to be
overshadowed by their heedlessly poisoning the minds of the
young in their zeal to be propagandists for generic "change."
What too many educators call "critical thinking" is uncritical
negativism toward American society and hopelessly naive praise
of other societies, including those that are enemies of ours
and enemies of human freedom in general.