Peace activist and gold star mother Cindy
Sheehan and spokesperson for a war-based oligarchy George
Will both published columns this weekend arguing that non-Americans
are human beings. Sheehan's column was written in response to
an Associated Press article that provided evidence that Americans
disagree with this claim. Will's column, meanwhile, adds to this
evidence by demonstrating a failure to understand the very point
he's arguing for.
I had a conversation this weekend with someone who believes that
Bush and Cheney lied us into an aggressive war and will never
end it, but who opposes impeachment
because it's antagonistic, "violent," and "will
leave blood on the floor." I submit this as further evidence
that Americans do not believe non-Americans are human beings.
If congressional hearings and potential hurt feelings are too
violent, what would the ongoing slaughter of hundreds of thousands
of Iraqis be… if they were humans?
The Associated Press article
that elicited Sheehan's indignation reported that Americans, when
surveyed, tend to know almost exactly how many American soldiers
have officially died in Iraq – an educational accomplishment
that Sheehan may deserve some of the credit for. But when asked
how many Iraqis have been killed in the current war, Americans
tended to miss the mark dramatically, according to the AP.
The only scientific survey that has been done estimated 655,000
excess deaths resulting from this war, "excess" meaning
deaths above the already extremely high death rate during the
period of sanctions that preceded the war. That estimate was made
some months back, and the violence has continued to increase,
not diminish.
The Associated Press, exhibiting its own Americanism,
places the deaths at "54,000" but says the total "could
be much higher." However, Americans in the AP's poll
gave a median estimate of 9,890 Iraqi deaths. And why wouldn't
they? The U.S. media has given them nothing to go on, and its
polls reflect its failure. Some Americans have sought out information
on the internet and educated themselves. Many, no doubt, responded
with a estimate close to 655,000. (AP says 5% of respondents answered
with a number over 250,000.) But many others probably guessed
a number close to that of the U.S. death figure that they knew,
or even something lower than 3,000. After all, we hear so much
more about American deaths, and our media has been made so honest
by the invisible hand of competition, that there simply must BE
more American deaths. (AP says 8% of respondents said there'd
been 1,000 or fewer Iraqi deaths.)
It's safe to bet that those who believe the death total is very
low also tend to support the war, whereas those who know what
it really is or even overestimate it tend to oppose the war. In
part, this result would be driven by the fact that some of those
already opposed to the war seek out information about it from
a greater variety of sources, whereas some of those who support
the war will insist that few Iraqis have been killed even if you
pile the corpses in their living room. But, in large part, I suspect
that many Americans would move toward opposing the war if they
were informed of what the war has done to people, if they got
the numbers right and heard a few of the stories behind the numbers.
However, the AP dug up a professor who disagrees with this theory,
and it seems clear that the US media will not put it to a test
any time soon. According to the AP:
"Christopher Gelpi, a Duke University political scientist
who tracks public opinion on war casualties, said a better understanding
of the Iraqi death toll probably wouldn't change already negative
public attitudes toward the war much. People in democracies generally
don't shy away from inflicting civilian casualties, he said, and
they may be even more tolerant of them in situations such as Iraq,
where many of the civilian deaths are caused by other Iraqis."
If Gelpi or the AP has any evidence for this, I'd
love to see it. It's the "in democracies" part of the
quote that is disturbing, and which led Sheehan to ask why –
then – we should want to impose democracy on anyone. Gelpi
seems either to be implying that people in dictatorships are less
genocidally inclined than are people in democracies, or to be
assuming that in democracies and only in democracies what the
people think matters at all. But US public opinion is currently
strongly against the war. The people have already "shied
away from" this mass murder. And, according to the AP poll
results, 77% of Americans find the level of civilian deaths in
Iraq unacceptable.
Gelpi further pontificated thusly:
"Gelpi said that while Americans may not view Iraqi deaths
through the same prism as American losses, they may use the Iraqi
death toll to gauge progress, or lack thereof, on the U.S. effort
to promote a stable, secure democracy in Iraq. To many, he said,
'the fact that so many are being killed is an indication that
we're not succeeding.'"
Does Gelpi have evidence that Americans view people's
deaths as part of such a meaningless calculation? Does the AP?
Maybe they do, but the AP goes on to offer additional reason to
believe that Americans have already "shied away," and
done so for possibly decent reasons:
"Whatever their understanding of the respective death tolls,
three-quarters of those polled said the numbers of both Americans
and Iraqis who have been killed are 'unacceptable.' Two-thirds
said they tend to feel upset when a soldier dies, while the rest
say such deaths are unfortunate but part of what war is about."
In fact, if you look at the results of the poll,
65% said they feel upset when a US soldier dies, and 60% said
the same about an Iraqi civilian dying. It's that 35 to 40% we
obviously need to be worried about! Meanwhile 77% said the US
casualty count was unacceptable, and an identical 77% said the
same about Iraqi civilians. And this is the same group of respondents
that tends to have no idea how many Iraqis have been killed.
If you read further in the poll results, you find that two-thirds
of Americans believe Iraqi civilians oppose "the insurgency."
So, Americans have no idea how many Iraqis have been killed and
no idea what the ones left alive are thinking. Would any Americans
lose their sympathy for Iraqis if they understood that most Iraqis
support the violent defense of their nation? Is there a way to
educate Americans to recognize their nation's crime in aggressively
occupying another country, without in the process diminishing
what empathy Americans can currently manage for the victims they
see as their little brothers and sisters in empire?
It's hard to imagine the US corporate media ever conducting such
an experiment. And this AP poll reveals the extent to which what
the corporate media shuts out and stays shut out. A majority of
Americans understand that this war was based on lies, largely
because that fact has slipped through, here and there, into the
media's noise machine. Americans have no idea what is happening
in Iraq, because those facts have not made it through the filter.
And they won't if George Will has anything to say
about it. His new column attempts to persuade us of the urgent
and timely fact that the Japanese during World War II were human
beings. Will draws no connection to Iraqis today, and avoids any
mention of how the U.S. government treated Japanese Americans
during World War II. Nor does Will for a moment question the acceptability
of war and of war on civilians. Rather, he argues for achieving
a higher plain of understanding from which we slaughter families
but feel bad about doing so. However, he does not insist that
we feel bad until some years after the war is over:
"Perhaps empathy for the plight of the common enemy conscript
is a postwar luxury; it certainly is a civilized achievement,
an achievement of moral imagination that often needs the assistance
of art. That is why it is notable that Clint Eastwood's 'Letters
From Iwo Jima' was one of five films nominated for an Academy
Award for Best Picture."
Having achieved this civilized feat by watching a movie, Will
goes on to reassure the 40% of Americans who find killing civilian
non-Americans acceptable that he's still on their side:
"Japanese forces frequently committed barbarities worse even
than those of the German regular army, and it is difficult to
gauge the culpability of conscripts commanded by barbarians. Be
that as it may, the pathos of the letters humanizes the Japanese
soldiers, whose fatalism was a reasonable response to the irrational.
Viewers of this movie, while moved to pride and gratitude by the
valor of the U.S. Marines, will not feel inclined to cheer."
Cindy Sheehan believes her son was commanded by barbarians. Abu
Ghraib, Haditha, Fallujah: these are the names of unsurpassable
barbarities. If the best we can manage is to refrain from cheering,
we have a long way to go.
David Swanson is the Washington Director of Democrats.com
and of ImpeachPAC.org.
He is co-founder of the AfterDowningStreet.org
coalition, creator of MeetWithCindy.org,
and a board member of Progressive
Democrats of America, and of the Backbone
Campaign. He was the organizer in 2006 of Camp
Democracy. He serves on the steering committee of the Charlottesville
Center for Peace and Justice and on a working group of United
for Peace and Justice. His website is www.davidswanson.org. |