This country faces terrorist threats from home and abroad. I
suggest that Americans pull themselves from the bowels of reality TV,
from the drowning waters of excessive consumerism and other
distractions to pay attention to U.S. foreign policies. Civilians
in other countries are paying very close attention.
The world knows that the U.S. military
invaded Iraq under false pretenses. According to the Costs of
War Project, nearly 200,000 Iraqis died and the country’s
infrastructure was decimated. The invasion
costs U.S. taxpayers about $2 trillion adding to the
financial crises we are still drowning in. The costs of taking care of
veterans from the Iraq War and rebuilding Iraq will take
additional billions over the next several years. From all accounts, the
war invigorated Islamic radicals and created fertile ground for new
recruits who experienced first hand the death and destruction around
them caused by the U.S. military.
The existence of Guantanamo Bay remains a thorny policy.
Despite President Obama’s promise to close it, Gitmo remains open,
housing 166 men who have never been charged with anything and therefore
have never been given a day in court. Many of the detainees have been
held at Gitmo for a decade despite a call by the United Nations to shut
it down. Amnesty International has documented torture and abuse at the
camp which has now been met with a hunger strike by half of the
detainees. What do they have to lose?
The world is acutely aware of the deadly havoc
that U.S. drones are creating. Just like in the tragedy
of Newtown where innocent children were killed and
maimed, U.S. drones are doing the same thing
in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Yemen. Our sensibilities about these
deaths seem to be tempered by the notion that drones are justified in
the war on terror. Some experts on terrorism are arguing that the
policy is creating more terrorists than the U.S. military can
ever kill.
Add to all of the above the U.S. forked-tongue policy that
financially and politically supports Israel while at the same
time mouthing the right of Palestinians to self-determination. Then
there’s rendition. There’s U.S.financing of mercenaries and other
rogue forces around the globe whose main goal is to undermine
legitimate, democratically elected governments.
Stir in the racial profiling of black, brown and Muslim citizens. CNN
has not issued an apology for John King’s report that the FBI was
looking for a “dark-skinned man.”
Yes, the peoples of the world are taking notes.
The cumulative impact of these acts of violence continues to take its
toll in different ways. We must demand the transparency the Obama
Administration promised. We must know what’s being done in our name in
other countries where U.S. military
and U.S. corporations are destroying the lives, culture and
land of sovereign nations. Where those acts are illegal, the American
people must rise up to end them; where they are immoral, we must at
least have an open and honest discussion about it. I believe both of
these would go a long ways in turning off the spigot of violence in the
world.
While we mourn the families and loved ones touched by
the Boston bombings, it’s high-time
that U.S. citizens stop asking rhetorical questions and start
asking pointed questions that get us to the root causes of terrorism
and other forms of violence. It is equally important that we stand firm
on democratic principles regardless of who is the victim and who is the
perpetrator.
“How could this happen here?” is a dead end question to the acts of
violence that are happening with more frequency and with more
intensity. “Why does this happen?” will at least get us to looking at
root causes. Then would come the difficult part - doing something about
the conditions that nurture and promote violence.
I encourage progressive activists and organizers to come out of the
blogosphere and educate their communities about why domestic attacks
are likely to persist. We must help our communities grasp the
interconnection between violence and injustice. “If you want peace, you
must fight for justice” is more than a slogan on a tee shirt being worn
by the chickens coming home to roost. It’s a starting point for
understanding the human response to enduring inequities and merciless
repression.
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