|
Edited on Mon Jan-10-05 08:57 AM by HamdenRice
I was listening to the Today Show this morning. Katie Couric was interviewing some retired general about the shrub administration deciding to employ death squads. Couric seemed oblivious to the significance of this. She seemed to see it as a signal that the war wasn't going well rather than as a decision to employ yet more war crimes tactics against the Iraqis. My head was spinning, and it just seemed that the war is so huge and so unreal.
I know there is a foreign affairs forum here where the Iraq War is discussed among other things, including 9/11 conspiracy theories and Iraeli-Palestinian flame bait. I know that everytime this comes up, people also say the war discussion should be integrated with general discussion.
It just seems to me that this is the political/moral issue of our time -- like Vietnam or South African apartheid, yet even here we are not addressing it as such.
Where is the outrage? Where is the equivalent of 1980s CISPES (Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador) or of the anti-apartheid movement? Doesn't the naked aggression against a soverign country, the Halliburton vice presidential graft, the 100,000 civilian death toll, the slow destruction of our own armed forces by this reckless idiotic strategy, the spreading of instability and creation of a failed state and terrorist haven, the proposed death squads, the bankruptcy of the federal treasury, the making of American political refugees of our soldiers in Canada -- don't these deserve a separate discussion forum where perhaps we can figure out the way forward?
<edited for clarity>
|