"The Racism of American Warmongering"

by LDH 15 Replies latest jw friends

  • LDH
    LDH

    Friends,

    This article was sent to us by one of my husband's best friends. He is a (pasty!) white guy, a Catholic priest. They went to college together.

    Anyhow, he didn't write it, only sent it to everyone I guess.

    He's spent many years as a missionary in Africa.

    It's a little different perspective. Your thoughts are welcome.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    The Racism of American Warmongering

    Tim Wise, AlterNet
    September 17, 2001

    Viewed on September 18, 2001

    -------------------------------------

    Well, it looks as if the good people of the rural U.S.
    should be breathing a sigh of relief right about now. After all, with the President and most Americans itching to bomb
    any place where terrorists might be hiding, one can only
    imagine the kind of wrath that would have been brought down upon the heads of folks in Iowa, Nebraska, Wyoming or
    Mississippi had the guilty parties been white boys with
    crew-cuts, like Tim McVeigh.

    All this talk of "Kill the Arabs," "carpet bomb 'em back
    into the stone age," or "get the ragheads" would have to
    have been replaced with "Kill the Crackers," "bomb 'em back to the 'Dust Bowl,'" and "get the trailer trash."

    But the fact is, we all know that such a scenario would
    never have transpired, and not because white boys aren't
    capable of inflicting mass death. They certainly are.
    McVeigh proved that, if for some folks Hitler, Stalin,
    Andrew Jackson, Lyndon Johnson and Dick Nixon weren't
    sufficient to make the case. But rather, because the folks
    who are so quick to collectivize the responsibility and the payback when the perps are dark-skinned or "foreign," are
    just as quick not to do so when white boys are the ones
    committing mass murder or engaging in terroristic
    activities. In the wake of Oklahoma City, none of the people
    who are now calling for war against Afghanistan even
    suggested targeting white supremacist groups and militias
    for destruction, let alone bombing the cornfields of "middle America" in the hopes of taking out a few anti-government
    types.

    Bottom line: enemies who look different, speak a different language, or practice a different religion are lots easier
    to view as the "other." As somehow cutoff from the common
    humanity of which we consider ourselves a part. And so we
    speak now of killing Arabs indiscriminately, of not
    differentiating between the guilty and the innocent
    (ironically, the precise mentality of whomever carried out last week's attacks), and winning a war, which we claim has
    been officially engaged. But we would have said none of
    these things had the perpetrators been internal extremists.
    We said none of these things about those who fit the
    descriptions of Tim McVeigh, or Terry Nichols. We would
    never have heard columnists calling for profiling of white men, the way that reactionary crank and wanna-be pin-up girl
    of the right, Ann Coulter, called for the same against Arab and Muslims this week.

    Actually, that wasn't all she said: she also opined that it should be the role of the United States to invade "their"
    countries, kill "their" leaders, and "convert them to
    Christianity." If these were the words of an Imam, calling for the forced conversion of Southern Baptists to Islam, we
    would call them the fanatical ramblings of a jihad-happy
    madman. But when the fashion-conscious and attractive
    (though clearly Snickers-deprived) Coulter says it, she
    finds mass support for her nuttiness, gets her call for a
    new round of Crusades published on the website of the
    National Review, and will remain a regular commentator for
    such paragons of journalistic virtue as Fox News.

    So too Jerry Falwell, who for some unknown reason people
    still take seriously despite his penchant for committing
    random acts of serial stupidity. His latest? Laying the
    blame for the attacks on New York and DC at the feet of the
    ACLU (for "throwing God out of the schools"), "the
    abortionists" ("because God will not be mocked"), as well as
    "pagans," "feminists," and "the gays and lesbians." After
    offering this truly maniacal glob of pedantic crap,
    Falwell's partner in fundamentalist lunacy, Pat Robertson,
    chimed in to blame "pornography on the internet," abortion,
    and the removal of the ten commandments from courthouses.
    God, according to these twin towers of intellectual
    mendacity and biblically bankrupt spirituality, is "lifting
    his protection from us," as our comeuppance for secular
    humanism.

    It makes me think back to what Barry Goldwater said about
    Falwell in 1981, when the rotund little preacher asked all
    "good Americans" to rise up in opposition to the nomination
    of Sandra Day O'Connor to the Supreme Court (since, after
    all, the Court was no place for a lady). "All good
    Americans,' Goldwater intoned, 'should rise up and give
    Jerry Falwell a kick in the ass." Precisely, and now two
    decades overdue.

    Funny how all the discussion of religious fanaticism among
    certain followers of Islam has led us to overlook the
    fanaticism of certain Christians who are now calling for
    blood. One has to imagine that if Jesus was here today they
    would call him a pussy for all that "turn the other cheek"
    stuff. And while I can't answer the question that so many
    self-proclaimed followers of Christ ask when they wear their
    "What Would Jesus Do?" armbands, I feel pretty confident
    that I know what he wouldn't do. He wouldn't be saying
    things like: "let's shove a couple dozen cruise missiles up
    their ass," or going out and spraypainting "Fuck Islam" on
    mosques, or screaming about the "sand niggers" while
    guzzling beer at some sports bar. And for that matter, he
    wouldn't be standing around chanting "U.S.A, U.S.A." at a
    memorial service, in an attempt to turn it into a jingoistic
    pep rally.

    The events of the past week have brought out the best in
    people and the worst: on the one hand, the rescue workers,
    diligently seeking for any signs of life amidst perhaps a
    million tons of rubble; yet, on the other, the cacophony of
    voices calling for revenge. Oh sure, they insist it isn't
    about that, but rather, "justice." They insist they want
    more than merely the continued spilling of blood, and that striking back has more purpose than merely proving how tough
    we are. But ask them what that purpose is, and how they
    think massive military retaliation can actually make us more safe, to say nothing of the safety of others the world over,
    and their faces go blank, or become contorted with anger, as they shout: "well, we have to do something. We can't just
    sit here and let them get away with it!"

    But "doing something" is not a valid pretext for unleashing
    war. And justice requires that we carefully consider the
    difference between responsible parties and innocent ones.
    Just as one would not think it "just" to level an entire
    neighborhood in search of one serial killer who might be
    living in the area, so too is it unjust to speak of turning much of the Arab world into a parking lot, in search of the
    few persons actually behind the attacks on the World Trade
    Center and the Pentagon.

    Not only would such a disproportionate response be morally suspect, it would be irresponsible from a security
    perspective as well. It would leave us all less safe, as
    millions more in the Arab world came to see the U.S. as a
    bully, unconcerned about innocent lives, Muslim holy sites,
    or world peace. And ten years hence, or maybe less, they
    would understandably retaliate in kind. What is most ironic about all of this, is that such a scenario -- the West and
    Islam locked in mortal combat -- is exactly what the Osama bin Ladens of the world have always wanted. It is a trap. A
    trap rejected by the vast majority of Arabs, and of Muslims wherever they may be, but one in which they too will be
    caught up if we take the bait.

    It's really quite simple: we couldn't kill all of "them"
    even if doing so was ethically acceptable, which of course it isn't. And those who don't die, who would look around and
    see their nations leveled, their houses gone, their family members incinerated, would at that point most certainly feel
    that they had nothing to lose by getting even. And there is no more dangerous member of any society than the one who
    thinks he has nothing to lose. Desperation doesn't make for very sound judgment, whether the desperation of the
    immiserated in the so-called third world, or that of the
    most powerful, and yet often least original people on the
    planet.

    And so what does that leave us with? The fact is, I don't
    know. And neither do you. And why we can't just say that,
    admit our frailties and uncertainties and ignorance, is
    beyond me. That we demand quick and easy answers is
    indicative of our cultural attachment to instant
    gratification: got a headache, take an aspirin; overweight, get liposuction; upset about something, take Prozac. Don't think, don't analyze, just do it. It is Nike slogan as
    national mantra. And it is the prelude to international
    slaughter.

    No wonder so much of the world looks at America with
    contempt and at Americans as spoiled children. First, we
    train terrorists the world over, including bin Laden,
    because we had to "get the commies" at all costs, even if it meant supporting dictators, fundamentalists, and murderers.
    Then we support corrupt and brutal regimes that trample the rights of their citizens. Then we fund and support an
    illegal occupation of Palestinian land, and contribute to
    the deaths of a million or more in Iraq from bombing and
    sanctions. Then, we exhibit our arrogance by withdrawing
    from international treaties and forums when the going gets tough or issues get raised that we don't want to discuss.

    This is not to say that any of these things, no matter how irresponsible or even criminal warrant an act the likes of
    what we saw September 11th. But there is something to be
    said for understanding why no one likes you. If all the
    other kids in the sandbox think you're a thug and a bully,
    then after a while you'd best stop trying to beat them all
    into submission, or thinking that they are the problem, and
    instead, begin to turn some of that analysis inward. That's what you would do, anyway, if you wanted to actually get to
    the bottom of the conflict on the playground. If, on the
    other hand, your main concern were showing what a badass you were, then maybe this wouldn't matter much to you at all.
    And in that case, you would set out to show those other kids who was boss, who was king of the hill. You would continue
    to provoke them, to attack them, and then act shocked when they hit back.

    That kind of behavior is unbecoming enough when children
    engage in it. When adults with explosives do it, the
    immature becomes deadly. This is no game. There is no
    "winner" despite the blustery rhetoric of our
    frat-boy-in-chief. And unless we begin to fundamentally
    alter the way we as a nation operate around the world, we
    are in for many years of violence, and counterviolence, and empty platitudes, and flag waving, and body bags. And if
    that happens, it won't merely be the fault of those who
    attack us from outside, but also the fault of those who were the enemies of justice, equality, and peace on the inside of
    the American empire. There will be more than enough blame to go around. #

    Tim Wise is a Nashville-based writer, lecturer and activist.
    He can be reached at [email protected].

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The ultimate weakness of violence is that it is a descending spiral,
    begetting the very thing it seeks to destroy. Instead of diminishing evil,
    it multiplies it. Through violence you may murder the liar, but you cannot
    murder the lie, nor establish the truth. Through violence you may murder the
    hater, but you do not murder hate. In fact, violence merely increases hate.
    So it goes. Returning violence for violence multiplies violence, adding
    deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars. Darkness cannot drive
    out darkness: only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate: only love
    can do that.

    - Martin Luther King

    Lisa

  • Uncanny
    Uncanny

    Very Interesting. It's funny how I appear to be the first reader to post a reply here. Discussing racism from within is obviously a sensitive subject, don't you think?

    That was also very interesting about Jerry Falwell's slant on the terrorist tragedy, too. I read somewhere how he said that the double plane bombings in New York, at the Pentagon and in Philadelphia represent "God's wrath against gays and civil libertarians." He might also have had the Jews and Jehovah's on his damnation list, but as I've read so much about the crisis over the past few days, I'm starting to suffer from intermittant memory loss: I can't remember.

    As far as the United States of America being viewed as the big bully of the world today, the jury is still out on that one. If the US is indeed viewed as the policeman of our planet, then surely the opportunity has arisen, if oh so tragically, for this great nation to become an international guardian of peace.

    I have been very impressed by the patient and controlled reaction by the Bush administration thus far, and do hope the perpetrators of this unforgiveable attack will be brought to justice in a UN-organised Court of Law. I noticed on CNN last night how one option for justice mooted would be administred by a 'judgement at Nuremburg' style of trial. (That was an oustanding success in hindsight. And lest we forget how many millions, not thousands, died at the hands of other blood thirtsy fanatics - the Nazis - during World War 2.)

    Will we ever be able to stop terrorism? I doubt it. But with cool heads and international impartiality, out of the ashes of the World Trade Centre Towers might even come the chance to resolve the Middle East crisis once and for all. As for delivering 'Infinite Justice', my money is still on the big boys upstairs for that one when the time is right.

    Uncanny

  • patio34
    patio34

    Hi LDH,

    I didn't read past the 1st paragraph or so because of the glaring inconsistency (and his very polemic style). IMO it's not comparable to the Oklahoma City bombing because no one was harboring the terrorist, and he was brought to justice.

    The US wouldn't be talking of bombing anyone if they could bring the terrorist(s) to trial.

    Also, to dismiss the desire to bring to justice ones who murdered about 6000 + civilians as racism is ridiculous. He obviously has an ax to grind and is critical and insensitive to this great tragedy. It says a lot about him.

    So, if he is wrong IMO in the very 1st section, it wasn't worth reading the rest.

    Pat

  • Pathofthorns
    Pathofthorns

    I think the article was right on the money. And you can't go wrong with Martin L. KIng either.

    Path

  • Seeker
    Seeker
    I have been very impressed by the patient and controlled reaction by the Bush administration thus far

    Their reaction has scared me, to be frank. Oh sure, I'm glad they haven't lobbed some nukes as the A-rabs yet, as some yahoos wanted them to do. But what they have done is impressively scary: they have gotten the Congress, and all our allies, to give the President carte blanche to attack any one he wants to attack. We haven't even been told why we think it is bin Laden. Our allies haven't even been told this. It's all been done on a 'take our word on it' basis, and yet everyone has rolled over and said 'Go ahead with your war, even if it will be a secret one against a undertermined number of enemies in an undisclosed number of countries.' The media has gone right along with this.

    Great, we just gave supreme power to Bush & crew to do whatever the hell they want, no questions asked. I hope he shows restraint in the future, but it's a strange thing to see the world give that much power to anyone. We know very little of what they will do with this power, but if past history is any guide it won't all be good. Time will tell, but one thing I have learned from this is not that Bush has shown restraint. On the contrary, he has managed to grab an incredible amount of power in an instant. Now we're about to find out what he will do with that power.

  • teejay
    teejay

    Hello, Lisa.

    I saw a report on the news this evening about the relatively porous border between Canada and the U.S. The Administration is "rethinking" the ease with which people can cross the border between the two countries. (No mention needed to be made about the chain link fences, guards, etc, that "protects" America from Mexico.) Seems that a couple of the hijackers lived in Toronto and Montreal and when the time was right, just came on over.

    I don't know... this thread made me think of that report. Pat may be right. If mcveigh had been black, maybe there would have no repercussions brought against other black men. I have my reservations. I think innocent Black men would have suffered in ways that no other White man did throughout that ordeal. I could be wrong, though.

    peace,
    tj

  • BlackMan4Life
    BlackMan4Life

    Lisa - Thanks for that article. The author wrote what I was thinking. Now that I think about it, at least two Arab looking men were murdered after the event - clear retaliation, but does anybody know the murderers or what they look like? When you look at the video of the Arabs/Islamic folks dancing in the street, have you notice that there is no audio. We don't know what those folks are saying or when that video was made. Is it possible that OBL wasn't involved? When those kids shot all those other kids in the mid-America schools, who did America go after? Who was the enemy? I don't even know. If it wasn't one of American's own, I'm sure I would have heard about it.

    Yes, it sounds like a lynch mob mentality to me. Or better yet - look whose is calling the kettle black. Keep it coming Lisa :)
    Peace, Larry.

  • Hojon
    Hojon

    A few things. First, the FBI follows militias in this country very closely and keeps tabs on the major players in them. 99%+ of people in militias are white, so to say that white "terrorists" are ignored is misleading. I'm not claiming that racism doesn't exist, the deaths and attacks on Middle Easterners is proof of that.

    I don't know of anyone that is yelling for the US to bomb Afghanistan back to the stone age (or at least anyone besides a few ignorant morons). The vast majority of Americans (something like 75%) want a controlled and very targeted response. Not carpet bombings, not nuclear weapons and not indiscriminate killing of all Arabs. That is kind of a red herring argument that I've seen used a few times in articles like this.

    They seem to forget things like that we give more aid to Afghanistan than any other country. We give economic help to countries that hate our guts. We send them doctors and medicine. We also, in contrast, have policies in place that kill innocent people (like the sanctions in Iraq). It's a difficult situation, one that isn't going to go away any time soon.

    However the reason I think that guy is hopelessly partisan is that he makes no mention of Clinton. Bill Clinton blew up an aspiring factory, Clinton continued the sanctions against Iraq, he sent air raids against Iraq, he was the president while most of the millions of Iraqis quoted in the article were killed. Yet he mentions Johnson and Nixon.

    He says

    And so we
    speak now of killing Arabs indiscriminately, of not
    differentiating between the guilty and the innocent

    Who says that? We? Who is we? Bush? Powell? Anyone in charge? Show me proof of that Tim Wise because I have yet to see anyone call for that kind of destruction.

    More than likely we are going to be using rebel forces in Afghanistan to help us find bin Laden and his men. We are not going to just start killing people for the fun of it, this by all intents looks like it will be a very narrowly targeted attack on terrorists. That's how it should be.

    BTW I'm a liberal so don't think I'm coming from the right. I'm not, but that kind of half-truth filled writing is what makes the left look foolish. It has several straw man arguments and is filled with obvious partisan bias.

    Blackman4life-

    Yes, they have caught the people that killed those Middle Easterners. They have also caught most of the other people that have attacked Muslims (and those that "look" like Muslims) and will no doubt be prosecuting them shortly.

  • Julie
    Julie

    Ah yes, racism--

    The apex of hot topics. There is no doubt that racism exists and that it does play into international events. Absolutely.

    I would like to point out though that many people of all colors have suffered though completely innocent.

    The Tim McVeigh thing, sure if he'd have been black it may have been worse (retribution-wise) but leave us not forget how some white people have suffered unfairly too. As a child I lived in Detroit during the time of the race riots. It was a very tense time and there had been some nasty oppression. My grandpa, a doctor who helped many people who couldn't pay (yes even blacks), was beat almost to death by black men for the two bucks he had on him. His arm was in cast during that attack. My twin brother and I were robbed at knife-point by a bigger kid for our milk money when we were 6 (the child was black). It got to the point where my brother and I were getting knives pulled on us regularly, we were very little kids too. We lived close to where the riots broke out and fled the city in the middle of the night. We returned ten days later to find our property vandalized and Whitie Get Out spray painted on the house.

    A few months later we joined the White Flight to the suburbs out of fear for our lives.

    Yes, there is no doubt that when one or more people of any color commit injustices, there are many innocents who will pay, and this injustice knows no color boundries. Sorry.

    Julie

  • larc
    larc

    Julie,

    What a sad, tragic story you told us. It is clear that not all the injustices are on the side of the black man. They have their owns sins. I lived in Flint Michigan for some time and knew a woman whose son was shot in the head and killed by a black gang member who had to prove his rite of passage into the gang by killing a white man.

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