Tuesday, November 30, 2004

UN "overhaul:" one step forward two steps back?

There is much to be hopeful for when the UN plans its own overhaul but into what?
Read this:
(From http://news.independent.co.uk/world/politics/story.jsp?story=588521)

UN to back pre-emptive strikes in first major overhaul
By Anne Penketh, Diplomatic Editor
01 December 2004
The United Nations secretary general is poised to recommend the first major overhaul of the UN in its 60-year history which will back the use of pre-emptive military strikes with the approval of a more proactive Security Council.
Kofi Annan is due to present a report tomorrow by a team of 16 high-level experts after he formed the panel a year ago in the midst of the Iraq crisis and asked it to come up with solutions for dealing with the challenges to global security in the 21st century.
The panel, whose members include Lord Hannay, a former British ambassador to the UN, has come up with 101 recommendations, including a proposal to enlarge the 15-member Security Council to 24 nations.
However, the panel members themselves openly disagreed on the model for an expanded Security Council, and therefore put forward two models. UN officials recognised that given the competition among governments to belong to an expanded Security Council - with Japan and Germany expected to be first in line for a permanent seat, albeit without veto power - the report is unlikely to lead to any consensus on an issue that has divided the UN membership for more than a decade.
The 93-page report considers the fierce polarisation of positions in the run-up to the Iraq war, that pitted the US and UK against France and Russia, and says that the council "needs to work better than it has".
Although implicitly criticising the US "war on terror", the report recognises the international community needs to be concerned about the "nightmare scenarios combining terrorists, weapons of mass destruction and irresponsible states and much more besides, which may conceivably justify the use of force, not just reactively, but preventively and before a latent threat becomes imminent".
It also looks at the UN's major failures - the Rwandan genocide in 1994 and the massacres during the Bosnian conflict - and argues that when prevention fails, "there is urgent need to stop the killing and prevent any further return to war". But military action should be used as a "last resort". The panel's other main recommendations include a call to strengthen measures to prevent the proliferation of nuclear material by calling for a moratorium on the construction of any further enrichment or reprocessing facilities.
It also suggests the creation of a peace-building commission that would improve the UN's somewhat dismal record in rebuilding countries after wars.
In a first for the organisation, the report defines terrorism, which has previously foundered because of the issues of the use of armed forces against civilians, and the consideration that one man's "terrorist" is another man's "freedom fighter". But the panel agreed that terrorism is defined by "any action ... that is intended to cause death or serious bodily harm to civilians or non-combatants, when the purpose of such an act, by its nature or context, is to intimidate a population, or to compel a government or an international organisation to do or to abstain from doing any act".
Although the Bush administration will find much that it can agree with in the report, it remains to be seen how it will react to Mr Annan's recommendations, which could be consigned to the dustbin of history unless endorsed by influential governments.
UN officials recognise the report is being released when its reputation is at an all-time low in the US because of the oil-for-food scandal in which billions of dollars were diverted by Saddam Hussein from a UN humanitarian programme to bribe officials over a number of years. "I don't think they've closed to door to it," said a senior official. "But we'll have to see if they want to engage with it."
Earlier major UN reports, such as the Brahimi report on peace-keeping, have been diluted after being pulled to pieces in the General Assembly. Mr Annan intends to spend the next three months consulting governments to see what ideas have traction so he can press for firm decisions at a special summit in September next year.

World AIDS Day

December 1st is World AIDS Day.

Learn more about the spread of HIV/AIDS and future projections on this interactive world map:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/shared/spl/hi/africa/03/aids_debate/html/default.stm

Learn about worldwide efforts to curb the spread and improve diagnosis and treatment:

http://www.unaids.org/en/default.asp

Have a movie night and educate others. Some of my favorite films on AIDS include:

Angels in America by Tony Kushner (HBO miniseries based on the play)
And the Band Played On (staring Matthew Modine and many others)
Philadelphia (recently re-released on DVD, staring Tom Hanks and Denzel Washington)
Longtime Companion
The Hours (not exclusively about AIDS but certainly a factor in the film)
A Home at the end of the World (also not exclusively about AIDS but an important theme)
Kids (I don't care for this film but its treatment of AIDS was hailed by some)
The Velocity of Gary
A Closer Walk
HIV and You
The Ryan White Story

There are so many to choose from and I'm sure others have a far more extensive list than this one.

Also, get involved and most importantly get others involved.
Volunteer with an AIDS hospice
Do a zine about HIV/AIDS on your campus
Staff a booth on it at your campus
Connect with local, national and international organizations
Create a work of art to raise awareness and/or funding or participate in a fundraiser for HIV/AIDS
Go check out the AIDS Quilt, it is SO humbling.

Here is a good place to start checking out organizations:

http://www.aidforaids.net/website.htm

Most importantly, examine what you think you know about HIV/AIDS. What you learn may surprise you. Break the silence. End the Stigma. Stand United. Communicate. Love.

Much peace.





A truly different (though not unshared) vision!

I Support the Troops
By Bill Shein / Berkshire Eagle

I SUPPORT the troops by remembering -- every day -- that we are at war.
I support the troops by crying at the loss of their young lives, the pain suffered by their families, and the indefensible choices my government has made.
I support the troops not by cheering the war they've been sent to wage, or celebrating the battles they've won, but instead, by joining the effort to bring them home now.
I support the troops by asking why a senior Pentagon official appeared before Congress and didn't know the number of soldiers who had lost their lives.
I support the troops by imagining a day when chants of "USA! USA!" interrupt speeches about ending poverty and hunger, not those that boast of America's ability to rain fire onto human beings.
I support the troops by embracing Gandhi's dictum, "An eye for an eye only ends up making the whole world blind."
I support the troops by ridiculing the notion that anyone can build a "culture of life" here at home while spreading death and destruction abroad.
I support the troops by fighting for quality public schools and a living wage, so the military is no longer the career of last resort for America's most vulnerable.
I support the troops by remembering 9/11 -- watching from my bedroom window as smoke rose from the Pentagon, and then, in the days and weeks afterwards, weeping over heartbreaking stories of children left without parents.
I support the troops by asking which "moral value" is on display when we avenge the horrific murder of 3,000 innocents by killing 100,000 more.
I support the troops by rejecting the morality of a "pre-emptive war" that turns foreign soil into a graveyard for innocent foreign civilians -- a policy whose adherents improperly claim is a legal, moral and legitimate alternative to "fighting the enemy here at home."
I support the troops by denouncing wartime "journalism" provided by embedded reporters, retired generals and partisan spinners, especially when it ignores the voices of those with the hope and idealism to suggest a better way.
I support the troops by abhorring violence against nations, people, animals and the environment -- a belief system approaching its 2,000th birthday. Because you don't have to be a Christian to know what Jesus would do.
I support the troops by protesting the new language of war, which labels the death of innocent children as "collateral damage"; the accidental murder of their mothers "regrettable"; the killing of journalists who seek the truth "unfortunate"; the slaughter of the wounded as a "mop-up operation"; and that reduces human beings to "targets" to be "destroyed."
I support the troops with regret -- that we train them to kill, send them to war, and then leave them to struggle throughout life with searing memories of battlefield horrors. Because while the war makers do their best to dehumanize war, they can't dehumanize the human beings they send to fight it.
And as we begin our holiday season, I support the troops by spreading the story of the week-long Christmas Truce of 1914, when soldiers from Germany, France, England and Belgium spontaneously decided not to fight and kill. Instead, they put down their weapons, climbed out of their trenches and met -- on common ground -- to share food and cigars and games of soccer. They exchanged photos of sons and daughters and wives, of a life beyond the battlefield where they could easily be neighbors sharing a meal or watching a quiet sunset.
Incredibly, they befriended those whom their governments had demanded they kill. From that brief and remarkable moment, we know that peace is possible -- and inevitable -- as soon as human beings have the courage to say,
"Enough!"
-------------------------------------
Bill Shein's column, "Reason Gone Mad," appears in the Berkshire Eagle newspaper (and soon at reasongonemad.com)
Click here to receive Bill's column via e-mail, as well as an occasional update from his soon-to-be-launched site at reasongonemad.com
© Copyright 2004, Bill SheinAll rights reserved.

Monday, November 29, 2004

Comparing Conflicts

Checkpoints Take Toll on Palestinians, Israeli Army

By Molly Moore
The Washington Post

Monday 29 November 2004
Civilians describe abuse; troops lament conditions.

Hawara, West Bank - At a sandbagged military checkpoint on a bleak patch of asphalt in the West Bank, an Israeli soldier yanked 29-year-old Mohammad Yousef out of a Palestinian ambulance. When Yousef's medical papers were produced, the soldier waved them off and bellowed, "I wouldn't let you in even if you brought God here with you!"
In long lines nearby, hundreds of Palestinians on foot jammed against a narrow turnstile, each waiting to be allowed to proceed - one by one - through concrete lanes resembling cattle chutes. All males under the age of 30 were turned away. So were all students, male and female.
"Open! Open!" a chorus of angry men shouted at the armed Israeli soldiers who controlled the gates holding back the Palestinians. As a thin man with a swath of black stubble across his face squeezed through the turnstile, his 18-month-old toddler became wedged between the bars. "Open it! Open it!" he screamed, cursing at the soldiers and gripping the whimpering child by one arm.
For two neighboring societies segregated by the physical and psychological barriers of a conflict dragging into its fifth year, the most intimate contact between Israelis and Palestinians occurs over the barrel of a gun at the 61 manned military checkpoints throughout the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Such encounters exact a heavy toll on both sides, as evinced by accounts from former checkpoint guards who describe working under dehumanizing conditions, and by numerous reports of abuses committed by such soldiers against Palestinian civilians.
"Most soldiers prefer to be under fire than at those roadblocks," said Staff Sgt. Ran Ridnick, 21, a marksman for the Israeli military's elite 202nd Paratroop Battalion who spent six months this year here at the Hawara checkpoint. "The mission is dreadful. . . . It tears you apart."
Michael Aman, 21, another staff sergeant who served in the same battalion, said: "Everyone, no matter how moral, if he feels a commitment to the mission, will or could fall into violence. We're all told we shouldn't behave badly to civilians - never hit them, never yell. But after eight hours in the sun, you're not so strong."
The Israeli military says the checkpoints are necessary to protect Israel and Jewish settlements in the territories from Palestinian attackers. Government and military officials have repeatedly cited the system of checkpoints in the West Bank as one of several factors contributing to a steady reduction in the number of suicide bombings against Israeli targets in the past two years.
At the same time, Palestinian, Israeli and international human rights groups have documented hundreds of cases of abuse by Israeli troops against Palestinians at roadblocks: beatings, shootings, harassment, humiliation and life-threatening delays. Last year, a female Israeli soldier assigned to a Gaza Strip checkpoint was convicted of forcing a Palestinian woman at gunpoint to drink a bottle of cleaning fluid, according to court records. This month, soldiers at the Beit Iba checkpoint, not far from the Hawara checkpoint, ordered a Palestinian to open his violin case and play for them while the lines behind him grew.
At least 83 Palestinians seeking medical care have died during delays at checkpoints, according to the Palestinian Human Rights Monitoring Group. At the same time, 39 Israeli soldiers and police officers have been killed at checkpoints and roadblocks, according to the Israeli military. A year ago, two Israeli soldiers at a checkpoint south of Jerusalem were shot dead by a Palestinian who carried an automatic rifle rolled in a prayer rug.
A Glimpse of Brutality
The Hawara checkpoint sits on the edge of the village of the same name, just south of Nablus. It severs a pocked highway that is the main artery connecting the West Bank's northern cities to its major population centers in the south. The nearest border with Israel is 16 miles away as the crow flies, farther by road.
On days when the Hawara checkpoint is open, it is one of the busiest in the West Bank. Sometimes as many as 5,000 Palestinians a day request permission to cross. They stand in line in searing heat or icy rains, depending on the season, until they reach an open-air shed with a corrugated tin roof. Often packed together by the hundreds, they must then wait their turn to pass, one by one, through narrow metal turnstiles that the soldiers open and close electronically.
As the Palestinians inch forward, armed soldiers standing behind sandbagged concrete walls shout orders to have bags opened and their contents dumped on the ground. On one recent morning, soldiers demanded that a man squirt shaving cream from an aerosol can to verify its contents. They ordered another man to rip the red-and-silver wrapping paper off a box to reveal what was inside: a doll for his granddaughter.
"You can't look at a person and know if he's good or bad," said Israeli Sgt. Nadav Efrati, a stocky, square-faced 21-year-old who recently finished his military service after spending months at the Hawara checkpoint. He said the limited Arabic that the Israeli army teaches most of its soldiers exacerbates the friction between the two peoples. "The main words they taught us were: 'Stop. If not, I will shoot you,' " Efrati said.
Early this year, the tension and animosity between soldiers and Palestinians at the Hawara checkpoint sparked an incident so brutal that it spurred the Israeli military to confront the devastating effect the checkpoint system has had - not only on Palestinian civilians, but also within its own ranks.
On an unusually cold January day, hundreds of Palestinians waited to pass through the Hawara checkpoint. Snow dusted the ground, and tempers and patience rubbed raw on both ends of the lines that crept toward the soldiers of the 202nd Paratroops. A camera crew from the army's Education Corps maneuvered around the soldiers and Palestinians, collecting video footage and interviews for a training tape.
"Go home! What's your problem?" shouted the checkpoint commander, a gaunt staff sergeant whose face was partially hidden beneath his helmet. The camera focused on the sergeant - a Bedouin, rare in the Israeli military - as he continued yelling in Arabic at an agitated Palestinian man grasping the hand of a small child. "Shut up! Shut up! Go back, go back, everyone go back. No one through - everyone go back."
The video did not capture the next exchange, but other soldiers at the checkpoint said in interviews that the Palestinian man began screaming at the 23-year-old sergeant. The sergeant handcuffed the man with disposable plastic cuffs and ordered him to sit on the ground.
Suddenly, the camera jerked toward the sergeant. He bashed the Palestinian man in the face with his fist. The man's hysterical wife and two weeping children tried to squeeze between him and the sergeant. The soldier shoved the Palestinian into a hut as the army cameraman followed close behind.
The man's toddler son clung to his father's shirttail until soldiers brushed him away like a fly. The soldier flipped a blanket over the window of the hut, and the camera's audio picked up the Palestinian's muffled cries as the soldier punched him in the stomach.
"For them, you see, they don't have a problem getting beaten up," the sergeant explained before the video camera a short time later. "It's the humiliation in front of all the people, the wife and children. I try to do it so they don't see me, so it's not in front of the people."
A soldier from the Education Corps asked the sergeant why he had attacked a defenseless, handcuffed Palestinian.
"Because he was beaten, then everybody learns and no one fools around with us," the sergeant said. As he spoke, the camera shifted to the Palestinian's wife and children sitting in the dirt. The youngsters wore colorful party hats their mother had offered to distract them.
With the army video as evidence, Israeli military officials prosecuted the soldier - one of only a handful of checkpoint abuse cases ever brought to court, according to lawyers and military officials.
After a five-day military trial, the sergeant pleaded guilty in late September to assault charges stemming from the beating. He also admitted beating at least eight other Palestinians at the checkpoint and smashing the windshields of 10 Palestinian taxicabs as commander of the post from mid-January through the end of February.
The court prohibited the publication of the soldier's name and home town for fear of retribution against him or his family.
The military indictment accused the sergeant of habitually using violence against Palestinians who refused his orders to wait in line or who shouted at him. In as many as five incidents, he "kicked them forcefully in their buttocks and pushed them backwards or assaulted them with punches and kicks," the indictment said. Other times he took recalcitrant men into "the women's checking tent that was empty and . . . beat them either by punching them or kicking them in their stomach."
A three-member military judicial panel sentenced him to six months in jail, half of which he had already served, and demoted him to the rank of private.
Checkpoint duty "is in the hands of a very small number of young soldiers who do not have the proper training and proficiency in security checks," the judges wrote. "It is difficult and wearing, threatening and frustrating. . . . In imposing the punishment, it is difficult to escape the fact that the accused had to face a situation which was above his powers."
'These Duties Corrupt'
The case exposed far more than a single soldier's violent misdeeds. During the trial, soldiers who had served at the Hawara checkpoint over the past year gave testimony describing what they said were common, accepted practices among combat soldiers who detested checkpoint duty and often received little or no training for what they considered a policeman's job. In testimony and in interviews, they also argued that the army and Israeli society should accept some of the blame for abuses that they said were the result of an impossible mission.
"When we do all these things, we are not doing it only to the Palestinians, but to ourselves, too," said Aman, who was a friend of the convicted sergeant and recently finished his military service. "The most important discussion should be in our own society. If you blame the soldiers, you miss the point. . . . These duties corrupt."
For the convicted sergeant, the pressures were magnified because he was a Bedouin, an Israeli Arab in an overwhelmingly Jewish army engaged in combat against Arabs. Service in the Israeli armed forces - which is mandatory for Israelis - is voluntary for members of the Bedouin tribes. "People in the village did not like it that I contributed to the army," the soldier said in court.
Unlike his Hebrew-speaking comrades, he understood every word the Palestinians uttered in Arabic. "I heard them behind my back," he testified. "Traitor. Dog."
After two weeks in command of the checkpoint, he said, he asked his senior officer, Lt. Col. Guy Hazut, to take him off the assignment. Hazut, a 15-year military veteran, said in court that he refused: "It didn't seem right for a commander to leave his soldiers three weeks before the end of their term."
The soldier's trial and the publicity surrounding it contributed to efforts by the military to provide more instruction to soldiers assigned to checkpoints, to improve facilities and to begin training a new military police corps, according to military officials. The soldiers who have served at the roadblocks said those initiatives were a start, but that they did not address the main problem.
The constant struggle to balance the security of their men and their country with the pleas of elderly women who remind the soldiers of their own stubborn grandmothers is emotionally debilitating, Staff Sgt. Sergey Zamensky, an emigrant from Siberia, said in an interview in the central Israeli industrial town of Rishon Letzion where he resides.
Zamensky, 21, also spent months at the Hawara checkpoint before he finished his tour of duty this summer. He and his fellow commanders described turning away a tearful young bride in a white gown on her wedding day and forcing students to miss final exams because the checkpoint was closed.
"Every day, the regulations were different," Zamensky said. "One day, you can let everyone pass; on another, no one is able to come in. It's very difficult to explain. They don't care if someone in Nablus wants to explode himself in Israel. They just want to live their life. Regardless of how strong you are, dealing with these problems is too much."
Zamensky, who attended many of the court sessions in support of his Bedouin friend and comrade, added: "They say if you're a good person, there's no way you should be doing anything like this and be violent. They don't understand the situation. They're living in a movie."
*****from http://www.truthout.org*****

When I read this, it made me think about all of the news I've been reading about U.S. soldiers talking about their feelings on the current conflict in Iraq. Also, it makes me think about the combat memoirs from Vietnam. I wonder if there is an odd timelessness to war that gives the same brutality to 'conflict' wherever and whenever it occurs. peace!







Existentialism is a humanism

Sartre once proclaimed that "existentialism is a humanism" and I agree. I think though that we need to move beyond the "I" eternally in crisis to see just how much we need one another to even exist. Case in point, my mom is a newly diagnosed diabetic. She is also an unemployed woman with no insurance and no dependent children to qualify for Medicaid. She is not alone in her situation by any means. Most of those she used to work with have all been "let go" and now "make do" on a third of what they used to make. When people bitch about having to "carry the burden of the uninsured" I want to shake them and say hey, what if it was your mother or your child? Would you care then? Would it be a burden then? The fact is, even fully insured people can't often afford the price of a co-pay or the "patient's share" of the medical bills for a mandatory surgery yet alone cancer treatment or diabetes care. So why people are so afraid of trying to overhaul an obviously faulty system that really benefits very few, is beyond me. Another thing, I work in patient care. I see what happens to even the most "financially secure" working people when faced with months and years of medical expenses...they TOO qualify for "welfare" and have no savings nor any hope for savings. They become POOR. Further, with the dollar dropping in value continually to the euro, with the U.S. being continually propped up by China and Japan, with us funding a "war on terror" and a military that's spanning the globe ever more, how long do you think it will be before every American realizes what it's like to be POOR or admits that they too are workers and that working for the wellbeing of others needn't limit this incessant whiny "I" but can actually benefit all? Including you.

All this crap about limiting choices and extending waits is a scare tactic, nothing more. If waiting in a line is the worst thing I have to deal with I'll cope. I'd rather do that than be afraid of losing a loved one to a perfectly treatable illness for lack of insurance. That's crap. I don't want you to lose either. Can't we find a win-win situation here? This isn't ideology, it is simply being able to relate to one another as one human to another. This isn't a philosophy but a conspiracy of hope.
peace!

Value Judgments

What is a moment worth anyhow, to anyone? If you watch films of war (documentaries and fiction) or read combat memoirs you feel a weird scale of time. That there is a duality of sorts in the fact your life is threatened (thus of value) but that of your "enemy" lacks that same value. It does not register to people dropping bombs from planes that there is a life below...in smashed huts, in gutted buildings, in fields, running. There is a life there and even if you have a "mission" to fulfill, and even if you don't see that life exploding/imploding/collapsing/dissolving/disappear/end, you are contributing to that end.
That end of a life. What amazes me is the rush to protect the unborn, the fear of disconnected life support and the parallel reality (duality) that feels perfectly justified in putting a man to death or bombing homes and hospitals. I don't understand that. I don't get it. At the same time, I admit that I have not HAD to get it. I don't have to. I can sit and bitch about it BECAUSE I am removed from that situation. I am not in combat nor have I had to be. So I really don't get it. Still I search for answers to it. Like a weird riddle in my head that desperately wants to assign meaning and relevancy to things that seem so unreasonable, illogical, and unnerving to me.
For example, I watched the documentary "Hearts and Minds" recently and there are several scenes in it where pilots explain that they never really connected faces and lives with the "targets" below them. This was just a job. You did your job and you did it well. These interviews are carefully juxtaposed with interviews of Vietnamese survivors, war footage as well as interviews with U.S. leaders/orchestrators/administrators of the war. It makes me angry to watch films like this because I want to know why it is that we can march on with the "lessons of WWII" ringing in our ears like a mantra: "We cannot appease a dictator" "We cannot appease a dictator" "We will not back down" "We must bring the enemy to its knees" etc etc. Yet what I see when I look at the Vietnam war (which the Vietnamese call, the American war) is that we as a nation rarely considers the long term "cost" of war, to the soldiers and survivors on both sides.
Do these people in America who are SO afraid of the idea of choice really care about the children born in a world devastated by war and toxic chemicals, devoured by exported and heavy handed capitalism helped even more by extreme poverty? Here or Abroad?

That is the weakness in value judgments. They are so easy to assign but so difficult to truly comprehend. When wrestled with, they don't hold up so well. Perhaps this is why grade school education (and some colleges) do not truly want people to think critically. To think is to question and to question everything even if it (and when) that becomes maddeningly futile.
I think it's funny too that people have such disdain for intellectuals as if they are bad/distant/divorced from the "working classes." I think short of being a billionaire or a millionaire with a healthy trust fund, we're all working classes. Think about what you've done with your life. In my short time on this earth, I've done everything from factory work to military service and health care. I love the opportunities the University offers and yet I also love the idea of understanding how machines work , how they're held together, how to take them apart. Is that intellectualism? Doubtful. I'm a rather boring insomniatic book addict, disinclined to try and "master" any one thing because everything has value. Everything can be interesting.
So too, every life has value and meaning. Does that make me "pro-life" or "pro-choice?" "Pro or anti-war?"
If anything I dislike categories that box people in to set ways of thinking. I called myself Buddhist today, by which I mean, I try to practice Buddhism to the best of my ability. But I have a hard time thinking about war and the justifications of torture, abuse, sexual humiliation and degradation and the general "othering" of the enemy that is a "norm" of war without being outraged. Hell, I have difficulty planning an event that so few people show up to without being disappointed. So much for letting go of attachments. I haven't mastered anything. I don't know anything. I don't know that I want to know anything. I like the idea of being an open book, a tabula rasa but I don't think we CAN be that. Even children have ideas about right and wrong before parents can truly shape that and sometimes despite a parent's best effort to do so.
I like to think that if we could truly sit and communicate with one another in a respectful and open manner, that so much suffering and misunderstanding could be alleviated. We know now that Vietnam "was a mistake" (according to the leaders from that time). We know now that presidents have lied to justify war before. We know now that words such as liberty, democracy and equality can mean different things for different people and that this definition is often not even theirs to define. We know now that attempting to place "our" values on other people is often met with resistance and resentment. So why can we not get past the "I'm right you're wrong" mentality or as I like to call it, kindergarten diplomacy. That though, is incorrect because even children in kindergarten are quite quick to forgive injury rather than carry a grudge for decades on end. So perhaps you are wrong. Perhaps though, you are also right. Maybe we need to learn to look at each other and listen without the outdated habit of trying to assign value to everything. I'm quite guilty of this, so it's an aspiration of mine really. So I keep trying and will keep trying to overcome this damn complex in myself first, because otherwise I will always be talking and never truly listening. I wonder too, when we are able to finally stop paying people to listen to us (counselors/psychotherapists/ "relationship experts" etc) and begin to listen to each other, to our children, to others and their children or loved ones, will the duality of value and valueless shift into true equality? Borderlessness? So many people I know value the fight and believe in "fighting the good fight" but to me, I see that people I disagree deeply with, also sincerely believe that their fight is the good fight. So either we're all wrong or we're all right or no one is entirely wrong or right. All I do know is that I am tired of the walls, the pretentious, comfortable walls that foster division and strip each one of the assumption that we are all capable of wisdom and compassion, dignity and community. I know that if I talk to you I will learn from you, whether or not I agree with you. All of this, I'm told, sounds quite "liberal" and "utopian" or that dreaded kill-word "idealistic" but what I want to know is why those words are bad, when did they become bad, who officially declared them as such? When I look at my son,
I am deeply aware of how lucky I am to live in a place that is not being bombed, made toxic by war chemicals or threatened moment by moment to end. I am also very aware of those who do live that way and amazed at human resourcefulness both in our ability to survive as well as to create more and more technologically advanced methods of destruction. What world will we leave our children if the current state of affairs is any indicator of what the future will hold?
As Thich Nhat Hahn says, all we have is this moment and to protect the future, we must take care of today. That is all we have. I really do think we all want to believe that what we do and who we are has value and meaning. The difficulty comes from the desire to convince others that our understanding is simply better than theirs. Does all war really boil down to the idea of right and wrong or is it more complicated than that because right and wrong is far from the simplistic meanings we assign and trade at will? I just wonder if we learned to trade in dialogue rather than guns and bombs, would we even HAVE to consider appeasement? We've written centuries of war, genocide and destruction, don't you wonder what the future would look like if we tried writing it as one of peace and diplomacy? Silly liberal hope conspirator, that's me. May your moments be blessedly deep.


"i always wanted to be commander in chief
of my own one woman army
but i can envision the mediocrity
of my finest hour"--Ani DiFranco, "Not So Soft"

peace!

Friday, November 19, 2004

Define "war crime"

Deconstruct this. Tear apart the binaries and you can see that the language of war itself dehumanizes both civilians and soldiers. Let's play a word game inspired by this essay.
Look at the way the language itself sanitizes the reality.
"unit seizing terrain" "enemy military occupants" "become prisoners"
"insurgents" "combatants" "ambushed" "killing one of their own"
"moral equivalance" "execution" "management of violence"
"They recognize no civilized norms of conduct, let alone rules of warfare"
"Collateral damage is part of warfare, and civilians will die no matter how many control measures are in place."
"War may be hell, but no honorable warrior likes to spread the hell unnecessarily. Killing Hassan, regardless of any attenuated argument the insurgent apologists may make, was both unlawful and amoral—and beneath what any warrior would do. Killing the insurgent in a split second because it was instinctual, on the other hand, was a tragedy, not an atrocity."

Now read the essay with all of the above quotes in their proper context:

What the Marine Did
The shooting of an unarmed Iraqi was a tragedy.
But was it a war crime?

By Owen West and Phillip CarterUpdated Thursday, Nov. 18, 2004, at 10:28 AM PT
A Marine shot an unarmed insurgent in a Fallujah mosque on Saturday. We know this because we saw it. The digital video footage of the shooting—recorded by NBC reporter Kevin Sites, who was embedded with the Marines—is running nearly continuously on cable news channels worldwide. We heard it, too. A Marine says: "He's f___ing faking he's dead. He's faking he's f___ing dead." The Marine comes into view with his rifle shouldered. There is a rifle shot. An Iraqi leaning against a wall slumps, leaving a blood stain behind. According to CNN, another Marine says, "Well, he's dead now."
This case would not exist without Mr. Sites. That a young soldier deferred to instinct over the rulebook in combat is unsurprising. What was surprising was the near-instant transmission of a battlefield video around the world, allowing us to witness the actions of one American rifleman. Judging by the swift condemnation from all over, the world is drawing its own conclusion about what happened in the bloody mosque. But to judge the Marine fairly takes more perspective and context. The video is clear enough, but truly understanding requires navigating an underlying landscape littered with legal ambiguity and moral craters.
When a unit seizes terrain, its enemy military occupants generally become prisoners, as long as they don't continue fighting. The Third Geneva Convention makes it a war crime to kill or injure a prisoner or to deny medical care to a prisoner for wounds suffered in combat, among other things. If prosecutors charge the Marine with murder, they will argue that the Marines took these Iraqi men as prisoners the moment they secured the building. Moving or not, the wounded Iraqi was a prisoner, and therefore it was a crime to shoot him, even in the crazy kill-or-be-killed environment of Fallujah.
The practice of taking battlefield prisoners dates back millennia, but the rules for treating them humanely are more recent. Ancient militaries treated prisoners well when they wanted to enslave them, not because there was any norm for doing so. It wasn't until the emergence of the chivalric code in the Middle Ages that rules of conduct came about. Still, even through the 20th century, examples abounded of prisoner mistreatment, especially at the precise moment of surrender—the moment when the battle is supposed to stop instantly and quarter is to be given. Popular histories of World War II are replete with examples of soldiers who killed their enemy after some overture of surrender was made or as retribution for atrocities by the other side. In Vietnam, Sen. John Kerry earned his Silver Star in part because he chased down and shot a fleeing Viet Cong fighter who had fired on his boat only minutes before.
International law treats such breaches mildly, with the understanding that it's difficult to expect soldiers to fight fiercely, then instantly behave amicably at the first signal of surrender. And so, the defense will argue that the Marines did not really secure the building and that these Iraqis were not prisoners yet: They were still combatants and still lawful targets; thus there's no crime. It's not clear how a military jury will judge this Marine when his day in court comes.
The twin essences of war are chaos and killing, so the very idea of placing inflexible constraints on the act of killing is at odds with the fundamental nature of warfare. Managing this cognitive dissonance while trying to stay alive takes tremendous skill. Professional militaries, like the U.S. Marine Corps, do this well because of their discipline and training. But the very existential nature of combat tilts the moral plane under these young riflemen's boots. In a place where you are fighting for your very survival, like the streets of Fallujah, any action that keeps you alive is a good one. And any misstep could get you or your buddies killed.
In this unit's case, one early lesson in Fallujah was to avoid Iraqis altogether, dead or alive. Iraqis wearing National Guard uniforms had ambushed them, killing one of their own. Another Marine had been killed when an explosive detonated under an insurgent corpse. Several insurgents had continued desperate fights notwithstanding gruesome wounds. Others tried to exploit the civil-military moral gap, acting as soldiers at 500 meters and as civilians when the Marines closed in. The Iraqis in the mosque may have been immobile, but to the Marines, they posed a threat.
Further, the Marines were fighting in an enemy city with little uncontested territory. There were no "friendly lines" behind which they could rest. The Marine in question had been wounded already. He was no doubt exhausted by five days of continuous fighting by the time he risked his life and burst into the mosque on Saturday. A well-rested man would have faced a dilemma inside, filled with shades of gray. A sleep-deprived man weary from days of combat saw only a binary choice: shoot or don't shoot, life or death.
Sleep requirements for pilots are rigorously enforced because performance is directly correlated to rest. After a sleepless 24 hours, a human being is no more coordinated or thoughtful than someone with a 0.1 percent blood-alcohol level, above the legal driving limit in all 50 states. Every subsequent sleepless day takes an exponential toll on the body, degrading performance roughly 25 percent a day until a state of chronic sleep deprivation takes hold, usually by the fifth day. Aviation units ground their tired pilots because they pose a danger to themselves and others. Yet there is no safeguard for the infantrymen and other ground troops who are doing 95 percent of the dying in Iraq. Whether you're a grunt fighting in Fallujah or a truck driver bringing supplies up from Kuwait, the military expects you to persevere, often with tragic consequences.
The literature on combat stress also suggests that prolonged periods of combat, upwards of 60 days, can lead to significantly reduced performance. Judgment and physical coordination are so retarded that some soldiers function only on the most basic level—survival.
So context is crucial when judging actions under fire. The very job of a rifleman is to close with and destroy his enemy—in essence, to kill the bad guy before he can kill you. But what separates the Marines from the rabble is their professional discipline—what a Harvard political scientist called the "management of violence" in describing the U.S. military. And so, this incident stands out for two reasons. First, it shows a breach of discipline, albeit under very stressful circumstances. But it also shows the extent to which the U.S. military will throw the book at one of its own. Already, the entire 1st Marine Division staff is involved with the case, and the top U.S. commander in Iraq said Tuesday that "[I]t's being investigated, and justice will be done."
On the same day as this story, the tragic news broke that CARE International worker Margaret Hassan had been executed by her captors in Iraq. Already, there have been cries of moral equivalence. One Iraqi told the Los Angeles Times: "It goes to show that [Marines] are not any better than the so-called terrorists." Al Jazeera fanned these flames of anti-American sentiment by broadcasting the shooting incident in full while censoring Hassan's execution snuff tape. (U.S. networks refused to air actual footage of both killings.) There is a simplistic appeal to such arguments because both events involve the killing of a human being and, more specifically, the apparent execution of a noncombatant in the context of war.
Yet it is the differences between these two killings that reveal the most important truths about the Marine shooting in Fallujah. Hassan was, in every sense of the word, a noncombatant. She worked for more than 20 years to help Iraqis obtain basic necessities: food, running water, medical care, electricity, and education. The Iraqi insurgents kidnapped her and murdered her in order to terrorize the Iraqi population and the aid workers trying to help them.
By contrast, the Marines entered a building in Fallujah and found several men who, until moments before, had been enemy insurgents engaged in mortal combat. A hidden grenade would have changed everything, and the Marine would have been lauded. As it turned out, the Iraqi was entitled to mercy, but Hassan was truly innocent. There is no legitimate moral equivalence between a soldier asking for quarter and a noncombatant like Hassan.
There is another key difference that reveals a great moral divide between the Marines and insurgents they fought this week in Fallujah. The insurgents choose the killing of innocents as their modus operandi and glorify these killings with videos distributed via the Internet and Al Jazeera. They recognize no civilized norms of conduct, let alone the rules of warfare. The Marines, on the other hand, distinguish themselves by killing innocents so rarely and only by exception or mistake. Collateral damage is part of warfare, and civilians will die no matter how many control measures are in place. Yet the U.S. military devotes a staggering amount of resources to ensuring that civilian deaths do not happen, from sophisticated command systems that control precision bombs to staffs of lawyers at every level of command to vet targeting decisions. And when such breaches do occur, as they apparently did on Saturday, U.S. military commanders act swiftly to punish the offender, lest one incident of indiscipline blossom into many. (Indeed, one Army captain currently faces charges for killing a wounded Iraqi after a firefight and pursuit through the streets of Baghdad.)
War may be hell, but no honorable warrior likes to spread the hell unnecessarily. Killing Hassan, regardless of any attenuated argument the insurgent apologists may make, was both unlawful and amoral—and beneath what any warrior would do. Killing the insurgent in a split second because it was instinctual, on the other hand, was a tragedy, not an atrocity.
Phillip Carter is a former Army officer who writes on legal and military affairs. Owen West, a trader for Goldman, Sachs, served in Operation Iraqi Freedom with the Marines.Article URL: http://slate.msn.com/id/2109904/


And read the rather interesting responses to it:

Remarks from the Fray:
Personaly I have been there and done that. I myself, would have done the same as that Marine. … a Marine's sole purpose in a combat zone is to kill the bad guy, These marines were not there on a humanitarian mission, they were there to weed out the insurgents.--reconcharlie1

From the moment I first heard about this I have been angry with the media for presenting this in the way that it was done. It was like taking it out of context and immediately showing this without us being able to see what all of the circumstances and the environment around the Marine were. I say take the reporters out of the embedded positions. We do not need this stuff displayed in our living rooms. There has been absolutely no fairness in this whole matter.--Gordo56

For those of you talking about WW2 and Vietnam, welcome to the new world. Imbedded press has changed everything. This controversy isn't about a liberal press, it's about a video camera. A video camera in a war zone was bound to show such a tragedy.--MrTrout

Roughly 85% of the messages posted on this board within the last 36 hours have advocated silencing the media. It has become an epidemic.. the Pres dumps Cabinet members who won't say Yessir, and the electorate wants to silence unpopular or embarrassing or thought-provoking news.--juanito87105


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Fascinating isn't it? I actually think the article DOES point out some key problems with the rhetoric of war, namely that of definition and the power in definition and the POWER in being able to define the acts of one as always good, well meaning, tragic, etc and the OTHER as bad, evil, and the enemy. This essay is incredibly insightful and I agree with the author that the Marine shooting an unarmed Iraqi is tragic and that the structure of this current conflict is to blame. I agree completely when he writes:

"The twin essences of war are chaos and killing, so the very idea of placing inflexible constraints on the act of killing is at odds with the fundamental nature of warfare. Managing this cognitive dissonance while trying to stay alive takes tremendous skill. Professional militaries, like the U.S. Marine Corps, do this well because of their discipline and training. But the very existential nature of combat tilts the moral plane under these young riflemen's boots. In a place where you are fighting for your very survival, like the streets of Fallujah, any action that keeps you alive is a good one. And any misstep could get you or your buddies killed."

They are trained to kill, expected to kill, and, AND, expected to do so without truly thinking about it because the ability to see an "enemy" as a human being just like yourself would make it too difficult to rationalize killing him or her. Also you are not just responsible for yourself in a warzone but for your unit, your group, your country even. Therefore you, the individual have no more rights to refuse to engage in "seizing terrain" or "occupying mosques" or to refuse any other orders, including firing on 'insurgents.' I would argue that neither the soldier nor Hassan nor the wounded Iraqi have any true sovereignty over their bodies in this situation. Therefore, can you argue that international law truly applies? Of course, that sort of argument did not help the Nazis and Nuremberg established a precedent that still governs conflict (albeit, increasingly less and less) today. There is no soldier's bill of rights in the military and certainly no legal protection for those who refuse to follow orders. He was not ordered to kill the Iraqi, he chose to shoot him. He was however ordered into a combat zone with the training to shoot first and ask questions later and to perceive all Iraqi's as a potential threat (according to this article). So who should truly be tried as a war criminal? This is a debate going on globally. I think also the responses are very intriguing as they blame the media for capturing the act (or at the very least, sharing the video with the rest of the world) and not the act itself. How interesting.
It is almost as if killing of civilians in a wartime setting is seen as normal, isn't it? With terms like "collateral damage" "insurgents" and "enemy combatants" it seems like it would be hard for soldiers and civilians alike to distinguish between those who are truly threats and those who are simply in the wrong place at the wrong time. Carolyn Forche's book "The Angel of History" has this one quote that always makes me think about war rhetoric. It is in reference to Hiroshima.
The female narrator aks, "Do you think for a moment we were human beings to them?" (70)
War leaves corpses, trauma, sorrow and deep scars. War requires the dehumanization of soldiers and civilians alike. I think the above quote applies to people on both sides as they are all victims of power politics first and foremost. My son asked me tonight, if Iraqi's might come here and kill because we went there. I said I don't know. He said if he becomes president one day he would try to end wars because war creates so many enemies. I think that's a very insightful observation. peace!

Wednesday, November 17, 2004

Morality, Sexuality and Politics

What an ambiguous title, eh? I thought so. After viewing "A Home at the End of the World" and "The Dreamers" with some friends we got into an interesting discussion on morality/sexuality and politics. I'm including what we talked about here because I think sexuality and the power of enforcable "morality" (coerced/legislated) DOES relate to human rights. So, some of the questions we asked each other were: 1. What is the danger of having your morality defined for you by the State? Meaning, when marriage can only be defined as "one man and one woman" does that not mark those who are excluded from that category as "Other"? This just sounds too much like considering homosexuality and bisexuality a 'sin' but not being able to call it such legally anymore. So instead the State is trying to define non-heterosexual relationships in opposition to heterosexual marriage despite and in the face of countless same-sex couples marrying. What is the power of that one little word anyway, if not legitimacy? Personally, I have never liked the word marriage nor the "institution" of it as I feel that both seem to suggest ownership and possession. I don't want to own or possess anyone. So that word really irks me. I actually prefer the term 'partnership' as to me this suggests an equality, a relationship of equals. The difficulty though isn't in the definition of marriage but the legal protection afforded those who are allowed to marry and denied to to those who aren't. Same-sex couples are still at risk for losing their children in custody cases, being discriminated against monetarily, occupationally, socially and even medically. This, to me, is the heart of the issue and the problem with the State being able to legislate/legitimate 'marriage.' I thought wow, you know we might actually see things change when the Supreme Court ruled archaic anti-sodomy laws as unconstitutional. Now I wonder though if it isn't one step forward, two steps back in this little dance of legal morality.
Can the law legislate morals? Can it? I mean can you legislate physical attraction or love? Can or should it be able to define what is perversity and sexual deviance between consenting adults?
Well...next question.
2. Could you and other consenting adults truly create a 'home at the end of the world' free of all of its social constraints so heavily embedded in your psyche? Most of those I am closest to are friends who are recovering Catholics (recovering from the post traumatic stress disorder of having been raised catholic) and so we talk about how the ideas of sin and sexuality still shape and dictate your relationships with others long after the ritual of going to church is gone. I was raised in the south around people who were very very very homophobic. When I was a teen I watched several guys try to run over the one openly gay man in our town. When they missed him, they threw a whiskey bottle at him and hit him in the back, then they drove off. I suppose much of my rebelliousness tends to stem from what I saw all around me but it certainly wasn't based in religion. I never cared for religion, especially not that practiced by people who didn't even adhere to their own damn rules. In the movie, the three main characters try to raise a family consisting of two men, one woman and a baby. They try to retain a level of intimacy but it always seems to leave someone out. So the woman eventually leaves with the baby and the men are left alone together. One of my friends talked about the potential of an already married couple inviting a third party in and how that might work. I don't know about that. I argued that you can't put your body in a place your mind won't allow you to go. There is a possessive tendancy in people to try to hold what they consider "theirs" whether that be a home, a partner or whatever. How do you or can you just seperate that from a very intimate act? I liked the idea of the three created their own family with their own rules and their own little world but it didn't work. One apparently ends up with A.I.D.S. and one leaves with the baby presumably to become a single mommy and then that leaves the main guy alone, which is apparently what he fears most. We don't get that from the movie though. It leaves you with the idea that that is how their little story will end. I really do like the idea of being able to love who you love and how you want to love them but I wonder what the movie is trying to suggest: a. such love is impossible to maintain? or b. you can't escape the social morality or expectations of others or maybe c. there are consequences to every act and no matter how loving or idealistic the act is, it can still hurt you. Think about it. Every character in the film is looking for love, pardon the horrid cliche, in all the wrong places. Why are these places wrong? Well it seems to be the inheirent theme because all of their relationships crumble. As I said, one character finds out he has AIDS, the woman leaves, the mother who envies the love they seem to have seems to feel lost because she didn't have that kind of love, and then the main character can't seem to function with or without anyone else. He seems lost in a sea of people, finding himself only in the reflection of others.
What's funny is my most self described conservative friend said he felt their morals were 'disgusting.' I don't see any of it as morality though. I see it as people trying to figure out how to relate to one another. The politics and morality get in the way of what might otherwise be a perfect relationship. If only, of course, they could get over what they expect from one another and what society appears to expect from them. It worried me that the openly gay man is the one who gets AIDS until I remembered the time the film spans: the 60's, 70's and 80's.
I wonder how a different representation might change the dynamic. What if the film was set in the late 90's with, as one of my friends suggested, a married couple and some third person they bring in. What if the couple is infected unknowingly from a blood transfusion one of them had as a child or from a sexual encounter one of them had as a teen. Would that change the dynamic any? I just felt like the film was almost suggesting that because the gay man who was having multiple partners being the one to end with AIDS seems to prop up the argument by some who still think that AIDS is "God's punishment for the sin of homosexuality." That's why that particular representation bothered me, especially coming from the same man who wrote "The Hours" which offers a very different representation of AIDS. Peel back the layers of hate, when will we be able to see one another without a mind unclouded by fear and hate? I don't know.
"The Dreamers" is really quite different as it depicts a seemingly incestuous relationship between a brother and sister and their sexual relationship with a foreigner (American) before and during the students riots in France in the late 60's. This film is very interesting in its admittedly voyeuristic style. However, the camera depicts the deflowering of the sister by the American but only hints at attraction between the two men. It does though detail in depth what we would consider today a very dysfunctional relationship between the sister and brother, in scenes such as where she dares/forces him to masterbate in front of her and the American and her in turn, dares/forces(?) her to have sex with the American in front of him.
She cries when she hears her brother having sex with another woman and seems to try and kill herself at the end of the film when she thinks her parents have found them all out but is stopped by the chaos of the student riots that shatters their bedroom window. Interesting and odd. The film has many layers worth unraveling such as why the American is represented as the naieve idealist who tries to stop them from participating in the riots. Why is sex the focal point in a film which is not just about their 'relationship' but also the changing political and social consciousness of the times in which they lived? Why is it considered 'liberating' to show so much of the female (and yeah they DO show ALL of the men as well) but sex between the two male characters (unlike in "home") is not shown. It is implied but never shown, while the sister losing her virginity to the American is rather grossly graphic. See them for yourself and draw your own conclusions I suppose. This film left us a little less talkative. I did like though the way that politics and ideological changes (and revolutions in other countries) and technological advances in the film industry created the group of 'dreamers' who felt they could change the world. That to me, was quite cool, especially in a time where people seem more content to watch reality t.v. than to try and change anything or to even try to relate to one another in any meaningful way. I feel that possessiveness is at the heart of domestic violence, abuse and rape. The idea that someone else feels somehow entitled to take by force that which does not belong to them and is not offered willingly. Maybe instead of pointing happily judging fingers at those who are simply trying to live in a society that does not deem them equals, we should look at the greater pathological afflictions within this society. What is the real threat to the social/society as a whole? Same-sex marriage and abortion or patriarchy and as Jackson Katz has said, 'violent masculinity'?

I always hope whenever I see unique and honest representations of consenting adults enjoying themselves sexually, that there will be a world wide recognition of 'alternative sexuality' and that those who have been marked as others for so long can finally be seen as human beings with the same wants loves and hopes and RIGHTS as everyone else. That's what it boils down to for me. I like this film alot and it allowed for some fascinating discussion but I'm not quite sure what the function of such representation serves in the eyes of those it needs to reach. I agree with Kerry when he said that he could not let his religion dictate the laws he passed. I would like to add though that it would be nice if we could include fear, hatred, ignorance, prejudice and general stupidity from that long list of personal biases legislators and presidents must remove before passing laws. We'll see.

peace!




New blog! New blog! Please check out my second blog

Born from the readings/research I've done in my independent study with Dr. Marcy Newman this semester, I've decided to create a space to further reflect upon memory/trauma/silence/public vs. private and other issues less stringently grounded in the analytic focus of this blog. So please check out my new blog and post responses. I'm hoping that it will be more interactive than this one as I'm grounding much of my posts in my new blog in literary, film, and historical existential reflection. There's a topic everyone loves. Right? :)

Here's the blog address:
http://imperfectlyerased.blogspot.com/

peace!

Tuesday, November 16, 2004

state worship as the inescapable religion

Finished Durkheim in soc today. At first I was rather confused as to the difference between his view of religion and the role of the state from that of Marx. Both seem rather similar to me though I do understand there are fundemental differences in their views of who or what is to blame for inequality. Today though I thought alot about Durkheim's argument that state worship is the inescapable religion of the present and just how far reaching that is. My professor commented on the flag and the national anthem, national monuments, and even the use of elementary schools as proof of this. I can see that. What I want to know though is how do you change that? How do you change something SO pervasive that it is almost unquestionable outside of the safety of a classroom or the "privacy" of your home? Also, I'm wondering how it is that the illusion of individuality is accomplished/pepetuated at the expense of the collective. By this I mean, how is it that we live in a society that proclaims itself founded upon choice/freedom/individual rights/liberty etc that simultaneously extolls the idea that there is a national voice/consciousness/indentity so very grounded in Durkheim's notion of state worship?
How is this duality possible yet alone real when it seems so contradictory? I realize that there has always been a history in our nation pitting the idea of the individual rights against the collective "good" whether that be in the way that abolitionists challenged the 'right' of the slaveowner or the way that the civil rights activist was portrayed and treated as a threat to the state and social order, even when he or she was trying to work within the legal framework to reform the system and NOT overhaul it. I realize too that we are under the heavy smog/fog of advertisers who sell us pre-packaged, mass produced thought labeled 'choice' and marketed as 'liberty.' I understand this. How do you change it though? Where do you even begin?

Monday, November 15, 2004

when does atrocity demand responsibility?

I've been reading story after story on amnesty international and human rights watch discussing the mass rape of women (which IS illegal under international law) and the ongoing genocide as well as the gross violations involving the targeting of hospitals and religious institutions (in this case mosques). One question remains in my mind, when does atrocity demand responsibility?
With the myopic focus on the spectacle of Fallujah, so many other atrocities are being ignored and sidelined. People are being slaughtered and raped in mass. International law is a joke at this point. A joke. There is no other word that fits. It is a joke, to be tossed around at a pool party of the who's who that runs the world. Ok that's cynical but it really disheartens me to think about the fact that while we sit dosed up on reality tv and propaganda (read: 'fair and balanced news')
people are dying in record numbers and I want to know what have we learned from history? The flip side to the question is of course, what can we do? Well gee I don't know...stop occupying one country against the will of its citizens and bombing it into submission one city at a time. Stop hoarding the world's resources and share the wealth so that terrorism will not be a motivation for anyone. Stop distorting the news and report the reality of war, the reality of genocide, the gross economic imbalance and the gross disregard of the environment. Do you think if they actually told the truth it would matter? I don't know. I have to hope so. Honestly, I don't know what to say. I hate the idea of war. I don't feel sanctions sway any corrupt leader to care about his/her people anymore than a UN delegation waving the naughty naughty finger at them is going to do the trick. Is bombing the answer? God knows I hope not. What is? What will stop genocide? What will stop the mass rape of women and children? I think that at the root of genocide and mass rape is a desire to terrorize and dominate those who cannot fight you. So to me it seems that maybe just maybe if provided the security and stability for survival, these 'warring tribes' and 'resentful soldiers' and whoever else uses the bodies of others to express their outrage/rage, maybe then they will stop. I don't know. I think though that bombing entire generations and imprisoning entire peoples or starving them to death is certainly not going to keep them from hating you or from hurting others. Perhaps to understand the current genocide we need to go beyond the surface, beyond the rhetoric and look hard but honestly at the past. What led to this? What needs to be done to correct it now? What needs to be done to prevent it from happening again? I know these are questions that I am sure are being asked by people in positions of leadership such as those within the UN and those at the forefront of human rights work. What I want to see is a global outrage, education and outreach. I don't know though that we can get to that point if we as a public continue to accept the gross indifference our government shows to America's interdependency and influence on the rest of the world.
I think THAT is the single greatest individual responsibility ever citizen must bear. Maybe we as a group or even as a nation cannot stop genocide without resorting to violence or violent policies (such as sanctions) but what we can do and I think must do, is demand that our leaders act and legislate in ways that are truly for the good of global humanity AND the environment NOT just for the capitalist corporate/military-industrial good. I suppose I am just too much of a "peacenik" "commie" "liberal" "feminist" "irrational idealist" to understand/comprehend U.S. foreign policy much less that currently being thrown around as justification for the many atrocities that are occuring as I type these words. I wish I had more answers than questions.

peace!

A fellow blogpost on politics/religion

This is from Blog Meridian. Well said John! Well said.


A couple of observations about religion and politics
"Religion is to theology as astrology is to astronomy: the foolish step-daughter of a wise mother."--Voltaire
Everyone else in blog-land is blogging about politics, it seems, so why not me, too?First of all, a disclaimer: I'll be speaking here of Christianity, but I don't see why, with the judicious shifting about of words, these remarks couldn't be applicable to the adherents of other religions as well. I happen to think that we here have a difficult time understanding religious fanaticism in part because we as a culture have forgotten what it's like to have a sacred book as a common, well-known text that shapes and informs a culture.Much is being made these past few days about how the 28% or so who voted said something called "moral values" trumped not just the economy or even war or terrorism as the most important single issue in this country, and that those people voted overwhelmingly in favor of Bush. This upsets those social liberals who have come to equate religion with conservatism; others in the Democratic Party are now talking about how to find common ground with the religious in this country but look at those issues that drew religious conservatives to the polls and, no doubt, wonder how they are going to find common ground with THAT kind of agenda.Point taken. So, I'd argue, don't debate the agenda per se but the assumptions on which that agenda is based. Yes--a discussion about the message of religion itself, about how what Christians CLAIM their salvation rests on (briefly, the divinity of Christ and the central commandments that we love God and love our neighbor) best manifests itself in the world via government policy. As a moderate-to-liberal Lutheran, I've been distressed for the past 20 years by how the current image of religion's meaning and policital agenda in this country have been shaped (or, in my more cynical moments, hijacked) by the Trinity Broadcast Network and Pat Robertson and Jerry FalwellI'd like to link you to this article by Amy Sullivan posted in Washington Monthly today. She provides, more succinctly and more eloquently than I could, a brief history of the rise of the religious right in this country and a stirring argument that "morals" do not have to be mistaken for "conservative," either in religion or in politics. General Democratic Party principles--defense of the rights of minorities and the socially-disenfranchised, a more equitable access to resources, the ensuring of economic and educational empowerment, the wise stewardship of money and natural resources--are, to my mind, not at all incompatible to Jesus' central messages in the Gospel regarding how people should treat each other. Indeed, He speaks explicitly AGAINST religious law when its enforcement would have the result of keeping a person from judging himself and reforming his life; it's no real stretch to understand those issues that motivate the Religious Right as the sorts of intrusions that actually drive people away from the Church rather than bring them to God.The above should NOT necessarily lead (and must not lead) to any of the following: a state church or theocracy; public Bible-thumping; a milquetoast Christianity. Regarding the last, I submit that it is much more difficult to love one's neighbor than it is to legislate one's neighbor into legal submission. Regarding the first: Jesus preached the Kingdom of God and the doing of God's will on earth but never advocated revolt against (even) Rome. Indeed, He was much more concerned with revolting against injustices perpetrated and permitted by His own religion's laws. "Render unto Caesar what is Caesar and unto God what is God's" is pretty obviously an argument in favor of a separation of church and state. As for the middle evil to be avoided: No politician who is also a true believer should be afraid of confessing his/her faith. Having said that, though, it seems pretty obvious to me that how some politicians incorporate religion and religious agendas into their politics actually cheapens the very fervent beliefs that some happen to hold dearly regarding those issues.Democrats need to participate in these discussions, and not just for their sake as a party. They need to do so in order to see (or be reminded) that the civil rights movement in this country, for example) had its origins in the (black) church, that many denominations support the "wall of separation" between church and state, recognizing that a state church actually has less legitimacy as a critic of the government, that "religious freedom" should be cherished but not mistaken for government-mandated intolerance that has its rationale in thinly-disguised religious rhetoric. Government can behave in a Christ-like manner without invoking Christ--its actions become no less legitimate or sincere then. It does not have to cry out Lord, Lord as it serves "the least of these."
posted by John B. at 10:24 AM

Sunday, November 14, 2004

"pushing forward back"

One of my dearest friends is a self-described/proclaimed "hippie" complete with the natural deodorant, non shaving, bra-less, happy go luck attitude. So when she gets angry it feels like someone has cast a huge shadow on the earth. I've always envied her lightheartedness. I'm not too good at being lighthearted, in fact I'm way too damn serious. So when we met for coffee recently and she sat crying about the current and future incumbent, this crazy little poem began in my head and I like to think it followed me home and said, write me damn it. OK that sounds nuts but oh well. The poem that follows was written in part for her, in part for my friends and finally, dedicated to the proud leftists who risk much to try and fight the propaganda.

Please check out the latest article on PTSD and the returning vets at: http://www.truthout.org and for a nice critique of fundamentalism check out:http://www.sickamongthepure.com/ and check out the article on the lack of separation of church and state. Also for grins, check out the Green Day song "American idiot." I haven't heard their entire c.d. but that song is cool. Surround yourself with love. Don't let them profit any further from hate. peace!




Politis

Where are the roots,
I am supposed to cut
If I am to bleed his rotted heart
From him?
I would prefer to stuff it in his mouth
Silence his too eager tongue
Leave him with the discomfort of all he is
Every lie pursed between smirking lips
And every stupid silence that betrays
An entire nation.

REFLECTION!
You want reflection?
Don't look for it from him
For his dull eyes are affixed
Asphyxiated
With dollar signs
I suppose he really is your reflection
Your FOX NEWS/700CLUB/CNN/Reality T.V.
Post-apocalyptic Would you like some fries with that crucifixion?
We've come so far in History
Can't you see?
We base our hate in sexuality
Because blatant racism is not so easy anymore.
They used to send postcards of lynchings through the mail
When it was perfectly acceptable
That a child should stand
With a chicken wing in hand
Eating and laughing along the swinging man's feet
As the first word from newborn lips
Is formed in hatred
That old language, is it really older than time?
I can give you mine
I can give you mine
You want this womb
I'll give it to you
A woman's body and gay sex
These are the oldest monsters in the closeted mind
Of the fundamentalist fascism
You call leadership
Don't
Mistake these words
For pettiness
Or bitterness
Or even bitchiness
For they are tired glimpses from eyes forced open
Forced to function in your torture happy world
Where war is peace
And rape is peace
And death is eternally driving the market up
Up and up
My fault
Is that I am TOO American
In this
Impoliteness
Too vulgar and impatient
Too mistrusting
Of authority
Tell me
Where are the roots of all this fear and wickedness?
Do they grow from the eyes of the dead corpse?
Or are they the twist ending in
Your slain and bloated tale
That you sell
As democracy:
A vision of a collective that eats its own
And denies the word "evil" and the word "responsibility"
For these do not apply to the victors in ANY war
Especially not the war for souls. No law but God's can judge
the perpetrators/crusaders and Saints ministering
to those too busy sinning to think
These are merely watchwords
In the latest gallop poll
That compares biblical pornography
and war to see
which is "quality entertainment."
To a nation of sheep
Killing for "Freedom"
And the right to rule the world
According to the Gospel
Of the one true majority.



"So when it's my time to throw the next stone
I'll call you beautiful, if I call at all."
--"Call me a dog" (Temple of the Dog)

"Fear is your only God on the radio"
--Rage (who else?) Against the Machine --"Vietnow"

"One man to five. A million men to one.
And still they die. And still the war goes on."
James Fenton (From his poem, "Cambodia")

"We lie down in the fields and leave behind
the corpses of angels."
Carolyn Forche (From her poem "Selective Service")

"But if somebody left you out on a ledge
if somebody pushed you over the edge
if somebody loved you and left you for dead
you've gotta hold on to your time and break through these times of
trouble" (Temple of the Dog "Times of Trouble")

"Coat hanger halos that don't come cheap
from television shepherds with living room sheep
and I pray, Can I be saved?
I spent all my money on a future grave
Wooden Jesus, I'll cut you in, on twenty percent of my future sin"
(Temple of the Dog "Wooden Jesus")


"I am not anti-Christian, I am anti-hypocrisy. I am anti-war. I am pro-freedom when it values every life not just those on the winning side of the war." (my friend)


Wednesday, November 10, 2004

too busy to be bored, too bored to be busy

The title says it all.

What movies I've seen:
"Runaway Jury" (not too terribly bad of a film, nor too terribly good either)
"Laws of Attraction" (sadomasochism for the desperately bored mind!)
I have a deep aversion to boring plots in movies. In fact I get majorly pissed off at the dead and dull plot that is so recognizable, it hangs in the air, leaving you to wonder what made you think THIS stupid love movie would be any different. Blah! It comes complete with the required tension building phase, the immediate sexual gratification phase, the breakup (oh can we say morning after phase?) and the stupid breakup love song and then finally, the reunited lovers realizing that they'd both been quite stupid. BORING!!!!!!!!! What I really hate about these movies is that usually they feature some couple quite well to do, able to travel to Paris, New York, Seattle whatever and living in posh apartments, eating food that I want to eat and going places I want to go and know I can't. And worst of all, they have to WHINE about their measely existences as if they have it bad. What a waste of money. They should have to pay people to watch their movies! Save your money and your time. Rent from the foreign film or special interest section.

"Shrek 2" (puss! in boots. and donkey. fun, funny, silly humor. necessary escapism.)

"A home at the end of the world" (I like this movie. I especially liked the fact that Collin Farrell spent much of it kissing the other lead male actor. I figure all's fair in love/lust and hollywood and hey if they can get some typecast macho actor to combat heterosexism and homophobia in a film I am all for it. I find Farrell's ability to blend into different parts without his Irish accent quite impressive. This movie addresses so many issues that I enjoyed watching it all unfold. Thought the ending was a bit abrupt but oh well, I don't write scripts, I only criticize them. :)

What I hope to see soon/again:
"I heart huckabees" (because it comes recommended and sounds interesting enough)
"Monty Python and the Holy Grail"
Bertolt Brecht's "Threepenny Opera"
"When night is falling"
"What to do in case of fire"


What I am listening to:
The Cure: "Wish" specifically: "From the edge of the deep green sea" (love this song!)
Black Tape for a Blue Girl "with a million tear stained memories" specifically: "Bastille Day"
Rage Against the Machine "Evil Empire" (quite fitting, don't you think?)
Nine Inch Nails "Pretty Hate Machine" specifically "Head like a hole" and "Sin"
Ani D: "Dilate"
Audra's "Venus" ("the sun is a candle left to burn")
The Doors "Riders on the storm"
The Rolling Stones' "Paint it black"
Aerosmith's "Dream on"
Tori Amos' cover of R.E.M.'s "Losing my religion"
The Smiths "Best of...part I"
Toad the Wet Sprocket: "pray your gods"

and last but not least:
Yo-Yo Ma's "Simply Baroque" chiefly: J.S. Bach's "Sei Lob und Preis mit Ehren"


What I'm reading (non-homeworkish lifeline to feed and tempt with thoughts of freedom, this oft-tethered mind) :
Neil Gaiman's "The Dream Hunter"
Bertolt Brecht's "Complete Poems: 1913-1956"
Lenin's "The State and Revolution"
Gramsci's Prison Notebooks and Letters from Prison

Homework:
Susan Neiman's "Evil in Modern Thought"
Emile Durkheim (for soc)
Modern Iraqi Poetry (for politics and poetry)
Walter Benjamin's "Illuminations" for an essay

I've also plotted out/signed up for my courses for next semester:
history of human rights
german 101
sociological theory II
indy study on fascism
the new literatures in english (postcolonial literature)
and possibly (as if there weren't enough there already...)
History of Modern Germany (Unification and reunification)

I want to learn German, French, Italian, Spanish and eventually Russian and Serbo-Croatian.
Why, you might ask? Why not. I just hope I can keep it all straight in my easily diverted brain.
I would love to get the point of fluency to where I can read the writings of some of my favorite authors in their own words without translation and can discuss them in their languages. That' s the goal. I'm thinking too, that I would like to specialize in the area of human rights law that applies to refugees or if I go to grad school instead: history. So I think knowing so many languages can't hurt in either arena.

I am most grateful for my friend, my dear fellow insomniac, whose lovely conversations until 2 and 3 a.m. have helped alleviate slightly my post-election gloom and busy boredom.

peace!


"is it that they fear the pain of death
or could it be they fear the joy of life?"
-"Pray your gods" from Toad the Wet Sprocket

Thursday, November 04, 2004

a letter from The Progressive by Matthew Rothschild

Published on Thursday, November 4, 2004 by The Progressive
A Letter to Incredulous Friends Around the World
by Matthew Rothschild

November 3, 2004
Dear friends:
I'm sorry. I really am.
I know it must be impossible for you to understand the choice the American public made on November 2.
It's almost impossible for me, too, and I've lived here all 46 years of my life.
Why would Americans choose, by a margin of more than 3,500,000 votes, to return George W. Bush to office after all that he's done?
After he pulled out of the Kyoto Accords?
After he trashed the ABM Treaty?
After he ignored more than 40 warnings about the looming danger of an attack by Osama bin Laden?
After he failed to capture bin Laden?
After he circulated false information about Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction and Saddam's alleged links to bin Laden?
After he bullied the United Nations with slurs of irrelevancy?
After he violated the U.N. Charter by launching the Iraq War?
After he bungled the occupation of Iraq and dishonored America with the Abu Ghraib scandal?
After he promised billions of dollars to fight AIDS overseas and chose to fight condom use instead?
After the ranks of the uninsured at home rose to 45 million?
After he sided with the interests of huge corporations every step of the way?
After he was the first President to lose jobs in 70 years?
And after he redistributed wealth-to the top 1 percent of Americans?
Let me try to offer you an explanation, and then, perhaps, a ray or two of hope.
First, some brutal honesty: A large chunk of the public here doesn't give a damn about what anyone else around the world thinks about the United States. In fact, for many people here, it is a point of pride to ignore the wishes of the rest of the world. Bush played on this nativism by saying, "We don't need a permission slip from anyone" before defending the United States. In the post-9/11 era, this pitch was an especially effective one.
Deep in the psyche of the American mind is the myth of exceptionalism: that we, somehow, are the greatest country on Earth, a shining beacon on a hill, placed here by God himself. This is the American superiority complex, a profound affliction that distorts our perceptions and enables manipulative Presidents to give the marching orders.
Bush himself suffers from an aggravated case of this superiority complex. In fact, he has elevated it to national policy, a policy I call messianic militarism. He actually believes that God has placed him in the Oval Office. And he believes, as he put it earlier this year, "God is speaking through me." God evidently speaks the language of war.
An illustration: According to the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, Bush told Palestinian negotiators, in that fleeting moment when he decided to involve himself in their issue, that God had told him to go to war against Afghanistan, and God had told him to go to war against Saddam Hussein, and now God was telling him to make peace between Israel and Palestine. (God must subsequently have told him to forget about it, because that's what Bush did.)
Another illustration: In his 2004 State of the Union address and in his acceptance speech at the Republican Convention, Bush used variations of the line: "We are delivering the gift of freedom to the people of Iraq. But it is not America's gift. It is the gift of God Almighty." Bush is delivering that gift by the bomb load right now.
Yet his invocation of the Almighty falls on receptive ears in the United States, one of the most fundamentalist countries in the world, as Noam Chomsky has noted. About 90 percent of the American public believe in God, and about 40 percent identify themselves as born-again Christian. Three quarters of the born-again Christians tend to vote Republican. This is Bush's base, and he and his political adviser, Karl Rove, did everything they could to expand that base and bring it to the polls on November 2.
That is why, in one of the debates, Bush signaled that he would appoint anti-abortion justices to the Supreme Court. That is why he came out for a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage, and why Rove engineered referendums in eleven states on the issue. In each state, the referendum banning same-sex marriage won by a lopsided margin.
These issues are a great distraction from the everyday concerns of working people. But it was magic for Bush, persuading people to vote against their material interests. In Ohio, Bush prevailed in the county with the greatest unemployment, even though his policies helped to create that unemployment. He was the boss who threw the workers onto the street, but the workers voted for him anyway. Their unemployment represents the revenge of empire upon its own citizens, but they saluted the emperor nonetheless.
The churches played a huge role in driving their followers to the polls. Never in modern American history have the churches intervened so blatantly in an election.
When people weren't getting the message in church, they were fed it intravenously by Rupert Murdoch's Fox TV and talk radio. This diet of misinformation was not good for the brain: A majority of Bush supporters said they still felt the war against Iraq was part of the war on terror, even after all the evidence showing no link between bin Laden and Saddam Hussein.
This is the geography of Bush's victory.
But despite all that, Bush won by only a small margin, with 55 million Americans voting to turn him out.
55 million Americans said no to the Iraq War.
55 million Americans said no to Abu Ghraib.
55 million Americans said no to Halliburton.
55 million Americans said yes to working with the rest of the world.
We are with you in your concern for human rights.
We are with you in your concern for the environment.
We are with you in opposing the Iraq War.
We are with you in abiding by the U.N. Charter.
And people here on the progressive side are trying to translate these commitments into power. The broadly defined liberal and leftwing community in America was more impassioned, more determined, more organized, and more united than I've ever seen it before. People here know the stakes. And as citizens of the empire, almost all progressives felt an obligation to consider the harm that Bush was doing to you, the victims and subjects of the empire, and so they redoubled their efforts.
It was not enough, not this time.
But the coalition of forces-unionists, civil rights groups, environmentalists, activists of all stripes, from the old school and from the Internet-will not disintegrate. It will continue to cohere.
And there's another good sign: The alternative media here is stronger than ever before, with "Democracy Now" and "Air America" reaching tens of millions of Americans on the airwaves.
Plus, we can now exchange our messages on commondreams.org and buzzflash and Truthout and MoveOn, thus giving us the capacity not only to communicate but organize instantaneously.
Media activism is also at an all time high, with a new mass movement tugging at the trunks of the conglomerates.
And a cultural insurrection is under way: from Michael Moore and John Sayles to Bruce Springsteen and Eminem and Margaret Cho and Jon Stewart.
We are finally getting our act together over here. We are finally getting our message out. And there is a seriousness of purpose, an urgency to regain power, that is amazing to behold.
No one is rolling over dead.
Like the Red Scare of the 1920s, like the McCarthy period of the 1950s, like the Nixon years and the Reagan years, this too will pass.
And so there will come a day when you and I alike can once again recite the line from Neruda, "America, I do not call your name without hope."
In peace and solidarity,
Matthew RothschildEditor,The Progressive magazine Madison, Wisconsin
© 2004 The Progressive

give me your hands

I am told I have your hands
grandma
they're so small
they give the illusion of delicacy
but you used to punch them into buckets of rice
to toughen your skin
your fingers ached from 15 hour days
sewing men's collars into shirts
Mine can only touch a black and white picture of you
when you were a volunteer nurse in Japan.
What can they possibly carry
by comparison to yours?

I am told I have your face
grandma
but do I have your tears as well?
The immense focus of your eyes
The laugh within them
fireworks of bursting colors
shattering the sky of a lined face

Do I have your rebelliousness...slipping candy
into the hands of grandchildren
who beg, always, for more piece.

I rested my head in your lap once
and cried from nightmares that seemed so real to me
and you sat
said nothing
and in saying nothing
said everything.
I wish now for the strength of your hands
the smile in your eyes
the peace in your heart

Give me your hands
Mine feel so empty
dropped open
useless buildings blown apart
the frames no pictures will fit into
empty, except for weight of these heavy thoughts.
Empty if not, for everything.
Empty but drawing together in this
my small prayer to you.

*The title alludes to a poem by Thich Nhat Hahn titled "Here are my hands"
and especially the excerpt below:
"Here are my hands.
Let me give them back to you,
but I pray
they will not be crushed again."

This is for my grandmother of whom I knew so little but imagined so much, loved so dearly and spent so little, but such quality time with when I was a child. She taught me by presence alone what it means to truly listen and to care.

Wednesday, November 03, 2004

Erich Fried's fascinating meditation on the "language" of the Vietnam War

"What things are called"

Why were you not like the tree Trung Quan?
a girl says

That means
her lover is one of those burnt

The leaves of the tree Trung Quan do not catch fire
like bamboo poles or like human skin

II
Lazy Dog
is the name for an iron cross
between aerial bomb and dum-dum bullet
Safety Detonator
is a peasant tied to a rope
and driven ahead across a minefield
Tug of War
is dragging a prisoner
on a rope
behind a tank
through a village
by way of warning

Bundle
is a corpse
in a plaited mat
Harvest
a row of bundles
in a field

III
Some things mean as much
as the mood of
a high official or senior officer

And some mean as little
as the life of
a handful of peasants father mother three children

IV
Pacifying a village
means not only beheading
peasants who were suspect or had been denounced

Pacifying also means
cutting out their liver
and throwing it into the air
The liver is the seat of courage

V
Wearing black jeans and trousers
means
being a peasant
Being killed
means afterwards
having been a Vietcong


*I like this poem and revisit it here in light of the current use of terms that attempt to
diminish the raw horror of war, experienced by soldiers and civilians alike, transforming it into something more palatable/less shocking/less war-like to the point to which a Hollywood movie carries a warning label for violence and a televised war can be shown 24 hours a day, on every major network. Fried also raises the issue of presumed collective guilt on the part of "the enemy" to where in death political views seem to matter little, when in life, the mere appearance of affiliation can end your life. I am bringing up these poems not to critique current 'actions' but to show intersections of history and critical thought to where voices of criticism were systematically silenced by war, persecution and even execution, yet these voices and what they critiqued remain a reality and retain the same urgent need for reflection.*

From a German War Primer (by Bertolt Brecht)

AMONGST THE HIGHLY PLACED
It is considered low to talk about food.
The fact is: they have
Already eaten.

The lowly must leave this earth
Without having tasted
Any good meat.

For wondering where they come from and
Where they are going
The fine evenings find them
Too exhausted.

They have not yet seen
The mountains and the great sea
When their time is already up.

If the lowly do not
Think about what's low
They will never rise.

THE BREAD OF THE HUNGRY HAS
ALL BEEN EATEN
Meat has become unknown. Useless
The pouring out of the people's sweat.
The laurel groves have been
Lopped down.
From the chimneys of the arms factories
Rises smoke.

THE HOUSE-PAINTER SPEAKS OF
GREAT TIMES TO COME
The forests still grow.
The fields still bear
The cities still stand.
The people still breathe.

ON THE CALENDAR THE DAY IS NOT
YET SHOWN
Every month, every day
Lies open still. One of those days
Is going to be marked with a cross.

THE WORKERS CRY OUT FOR BREAD
The merchants cry out for markets.
The unemployed were hungry. The employed
Are hungry now.
The hands that lay folded are busy again.
They are making shells.

THOSE WHO TAKE THE MEAT FROM THE TABLE
Teach contentment.
Those for whom the contribution is destined
Demand sacrifice.
Those who eat their fill speak to the hungry
Of wonderful times to come.
Those who lead the country into the abyss
Call ruling too difficult
For ordinary men.

WHEN THE LEADERS SPEAK OF PEACE
The common folk know
That war is coming.
When the leaders curse war
The mobilization order is already written out.

THOSE AT THE TOP SAY: PEACE
AND WAR
Are of different substance.
But their peace and their war
Are like wind and storm.
War grows from their peace
Like son from his mother
He bears
Her frightful features.

Their war kills
Whatever their peace
Has left over.
ON THE WALL WAS CHALKED:
They want war.
The man who wrote it
Has already fallen.

THOSE AT THE TOP SAY:
This way to glory.
Those down below say:
This way to the grave.

THE WAR WHICH IS COMING
Is not the first one. There were
Other wars before it.
When the last one came to an end
There were conquerors and conquered.
Among the conquered the common people
Starved. Among the conquerors
The common people starved too.

THOSE AT THE TOP SAY COMRADESHIP
Reigns in the army.
The truth of this is seen
In the cookhouse.
In their hearts should be
The selfsame courage. But
On their plates
Are two kinds of rations.

WHEN IT COMES TO MARCHING MANY DO NOT
KNOW
That their enemy is marching at their head.
The voice which gives them their orders
Is their enemy's voice and
The man who speaks of the enemy
Is the enemy himself.

IT IS NIGHT
The married couples
Lie in their beds. The young women
Will bear orphans.

GENERAL, YOUR TANK IS A POWERFUL VEHICLE
It smashes down forests and crushes a hundred men.
But it has one defect:
It needs a driver.

General, your bomber is powerful.
It flies faster than a storm and carries more than an elephant.
But it has one defect:
It needs a mechanic.

General, man is very useful.
He can fly and he can kill.
But he has one defect:
He can think.