This country is in the middle of a moral meltdown.
What should one call it but immoral when a country tortures people;
when it kidnaps them off the street; when its Department of Justice
writes disgraceful memoranda approving the kidnapping and torture;
when it causes the deaths of tens of thousands of persons by artillery,
bombings, missiles and rifle fire for a cause nearly all think a
great mistake and one caused by lies; when it claims it must continue
this murder lest its position in the world decline, though the history
of its relatively recent prior debacle, Viet Nam, in which it made
exactly the same claim about a potentially declining position, shows
that the opposite result occurs from terminating a horrid mistake;
when it continues its horrid actions, despite the lesson of Viet
Nam, in part because the Pretexter-in-Chief secretly relies on the
advice of one of the arch, never punished, criminals of the Viet
Nam era, Henry Kissinger; when it continues its horrid, losing actions
even though a fundamental principle of the financial capitalism
it seeks to force upon the whole world is to cut your losses?
What should one call it but immoral when the Congress
(and the media) willingly, enthusiastically jumped aboard the bandwagon
for this war that has caused tens of thousands of deaths; did so
without questioning its lying rationale(s) to any significant extent;
has never taken the slightest action to bring it to a close; refuses
to even consider so slight a punishment as censure of those who
brought it on; will not even mention the dread word impeachment;
is in the grip of a tyrannical Republican leadership and corrupt
Republican followers, assisted defacto by a Democratic leadership
and followers who have no spine and who stood, and stand, for no
principles; and when the only thing members of Congress care about
is bringing home the pork -- including John Murtha, the king of
pork, you know, though he did speak out on the war, for which he
got blasted?
What should one call it but immoral when the Republican
Party, with its K Street program, has successfully imposed upon
the country what may be the most corrupt, the most bribe-ridden,
the most graft-ridden, Congressional autocracy since the Gilded
Age of the late 19th Century, and when the country's corporations
and investment banks play ball with this and are, besides, riddled
with financial corruption?
What should one call it but immoral when the Congress,
desperately seeking reelection, and fearing to offend anyone, votes
to give the President the power to continue approving what in effect
is torture: he, after all -- the same man who previously authorized
and desired torture -- will define what is or is not permitted;
and when the Congress and media willfully refuse to recognize the
obvious truth that the Pretexter and Vice Pretexter were the cause
of the torture and kidnapping?
What should one call it but immoral when things mentioned
in this essay have been permitted because so many conservatives
in the country -- so many citizens who are red staters
in viewpoint regardless of where they live -- have agreed with what
has been done; continue to agree with it and want it done; vote
for the people who are responsible for it; and by their agreement
and votes have enabled it to continue, especially since the cheap
hacks in politics who -- often knowing no trade or profession or
job but politics -- fear loss of an election above all else?
What should one call it but immoral when American
citizens, unlike the Germans of the 1930s and 1940s, could speak
against the criminals, and vote to throw them out, without fear
of being hung from lamp posts or meat hooks, yet instead speak in
favor of the criminals and vote to keep them in office?
There is, one thinks, only one conclusion from all
of this. This has become, at least currently, a deeply immoral nation.
It is a nation in the throes of a moral breakdown, a moral meltdown.
Yet people are surprised when some nut walks into a school building
and starts shooting children? Surprise is possible only because
this country has not, as a country, looked in the mirror.
Iraq is by far not the first time this country has
suffered a moral meltdown. Other examples are, unhappily, legion.
This country approved of slavery for nearly 90 years and reviled
abolitionists for decades. Southerners murdered black prisoners
of war during the Civil War. The country allowed Jim Crow to be
imposed by a brutal South for 90 years (and allowed the South defacto
to run Congress and therefore the country, as it still does). The
country allowed the South to lynch blacks by the thousands. The
country has railroaded, and hung or electrocuted, so-called radicals
who likely were innocent of, or at least some of whom were innocent
of, the charges against them. (E.g., the Haymarket socialists, and
maybe Sacco and Vanzetti too, though opinions differ about the latter
two.) This country acted unspeakably in the Philippines Insurrection,
when it tortured people, burned down villages and engaged in mass
murder -- all of which our historians cavalierly ignored, reprehensibly
ignored, for 65 or 70 years, until Viet Nam was well advanced. The
country acted unspeakably in Viet Nam, which is too close in time
for American actions to need detailing.
Moral breakdowns are, it appears, a regular phenomenon
of American national life. And, without getting into it very deeply,
they are always accompanied, as today, by false protestations that
what is being done is in the name of a higher civilization, is in
the name of an asserted moral imperative: slavery was claimed to
be a positive good; Jim Crow was claimed to be a desirable and necessary
separation of the races; socialists had to be eliminated lest they
destroy the nation; we were civilizing the benighted in the Philippines;
we were stopping the march of worldwide Communism in Viet Nam; today
it is claimed we fight in Iraq to stop the march of worldwide jihadism,
worldwide Islamofascism, etc., etc.
As said, this country's moral derelictions are not
looked at as, or described in terms of being, moral delicts. They
are looked at and described in other ways, and by the use of other
terms. Why the country shies from using the word immoral does not
seem hard to guess -- who, after all, wants to describe his or her
own conduct as immoral, or the conduct of those he/she votes for
and supports as immoral, or his or her own country as immoral. What
American historian wants to say, and does not fear the consequences
to himself of saying, that the actions of this country have been
or are immoral?
Yet immoral is exactly what the historical and current
actions discussed here have been and are, and one suspects that
a basic reason underlying the bitter opposition of many of us to
what has been occurring recently is precisely that this country,
its leaders, its media, its citizens have been acting immorally,
very immorally, and continue to act very immorally. Call me radical
(to steal from the opening sentence of Moby Dick), and call all
of us radical who are motivated by the fact that the actions of
this country have been horribly immoral, but that won't change the
fact of historical and current immorality. (Nor will it change the
fact, at the heart of one of Ibsen's plays, that persons who are
willing to see and enunciate the truth are reviled for precisely
that reason.) Nor will it change the justness of a comment made
at an anti-imperialist rally in 1899 by Carl Schurz, in a take -off
of Decatur's famous but usually incompletely quoted statement about
my country right or wrong. "Our country," said Schurz,
"right or wrong. When right, to be kept right; when wrong,
to be put right."
Lawrence R. Velvel is the Dean of Massachusetts
School of Law. Click
here to contact Dean Velvel. |