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Politics : Impeach George W. Bush -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Raymond Duray who wrote (21690)7/1/2003 10:44:49 PM
From: Ron  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
Is There Anything Left That Matters?
by Joan Chittister, (Order of Saint Benedict)

This is what I don't understand: All of a sudden nothing seems to
matter.
First, they said they wanted Bin Laden "dead or alive." But they didn't
get him. So now they tell us that it doesn't matter. Our mission is greater
than one man.

Then they said they wanted Saddam Hussein, "dead or alive." He's
apparently alive but we haven't got him yet, either. However, President Bush told
reporters recently, "It doesn't matter. Our mission is greater than one man."

Finally, they told us that we were invading Iraq to destroy their
weapons of mass destruction. Now they say those weapons possibly don't exist.
Maybe never existed. Apparently that doesn't matter either.

Except that it does matter. I know we're not supposed to say that. I know it's called "unpatriotic." But it's also called honesty. And dishonesty matters.

It matters that the infrastructure of a foreign nation that couldn't
defend itself against us has been destroyed on the grounds that it was a
military threat to the world. It matters that it was destroyed by us under a new
doctrine of "pre-emptive war" when there was apparently nothing worth
pre-empting.

It surely matters to the families here whose sons went to war to make
the world safe from weapons of mass destruction and will never come home.

It matters to the Iraqi girl whose face was burned by a lamp that
toppled over as a result of a U.S. bombing run. It matters to Ali, the Iraqi boy
who lost his family - and both his arms - in a U.S. air attack. It matters
to the people in Baghdad whose water supply is now fetid, whose
electricity is gone, whose streets are unsafe, whose 158 government ministries'
buildings and all their records have been destroyed.

It matters that the people we say we "liberated" do not feel liberated
in the midst of the lawlessness, destruction and wholesale social suffering
that so-called liberation created.

It matters to the United Nations whose integrity was impugned, whose
authority was denied, whose inspection teams are even now still being overlooked
in the process of technical evaluation and disarmament. It matters to the reputation of the United States in the eyes of the world, both now and for decades to come, perhaps.

And surely it matters to the integrity of this nation whether its
intelligence gathering agencies have any real intelligence or not before
we launch a military armada on its say-so. And it should matter whether or
not our government is either incompetent and didn't know what they were
doing or were dishonest and refused to say.

The unspoken truth is that either as a people we were misled or we were
lied to, about the real reason for this war. Either we made a huge - and
unforgivable - mistake, an arrogant or ignorant mistake, or we are swaggering
around the world like a blind giant, flailing in all directions while the rest of
the world watches in horror or in ridicule.

If Bill Clinton's sex life matters, surely a president's use of global force against
some of the weakest people in the world matters. If a president's word in a court
of law about a private indiscretion matters, surely a president's word to the
community of nations and the security of millions of people matters.

And if not, why not? If not, surely there is something as wrong with us
as citizens, as thinkers, as there must be with some facet of the government.
If wars that the public says are wrong yesterday - as over 70% of U.S. citizens
did before the attack on Iraq - suddenly become "right" the minute the first
bombs drop, what kind of national morality is that?

Of what are we really capable as a nation if the considered judgment of
politicians and people around the world means nothing to us as a people?

What is the depth of the American soul if we can allow destruction to be
done in our name and the name of "liberation" and never even demand an
accounting of its costs, both personal and public, when it is over?

We like to take comfort in the notion that people make a distinction
between our government and ourselves. We like to say that the people of the
world love Americans, they simply mistrust our government. But excoriating a
distant and anonymous "government" for wreaking rubble on a nation in
pretense of good requires very little of either character or intelligence.

What may count most, however, is that we may well be the ones Proverbs
warns when it reminds us: "Kings take pleasure in honest lips; they value the
one who speaks the truth." The point is clear: If the people speak and the
king doesn't listen, there is something wrong with the king. If the king acts
precipitously and the people say nothing, something is wrong with the
people. It may be time for us to realize that in a country that prides
itself on being democratic, we are our government. And the rest of the
world is figuring that out very quickly.

From where I stand, that matters.