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from Points for a Compass Rose by Evan S. Connell:
Listen. I heard just a little while ago that U.S. fighter bombers attacked and destroyed a primary school, killing eight children.
Is the dream dead? Is Nixon mad?
When asked to compare America with a previous nation Arnold Toynbee replied that it corresponds to Rome under Cicero during the final days of the Republic because of the inconceivable power it employs to the distress and suffering of so many people, because of a Constitution which once was admirable but is now invalid, because of disorder at home and, above all else, because of violence. Plague creeps down our doors; a foul odor spreads.
To Edward Gibbon I am indebted for pointing out that the inhabitants of a declining empire could be lured into military service only by dread of punishment or hope of profit, however miserable. Obvious parallels present themselves.
In June of 1775 a resolution was passed by the Congress disclaiming any intent to invade Canada. A month later an invasion was secretly authorized. In April of 1970 we were assured by Secretary Rogers that no Americans would be sent into Cambodia. Within 5 days what happened?
Will our last liberty be the option to believe or disbelieve?
There are those who think we prepare a vial of rage for ourselves to drink; vengeance is being stored. Look. We’ve sown bombs like seeds across the Orient. Would you care to predict the harvest?
Look. Relocation Centers are being planned for those adjudged inimical to National Security.
Let me explain. The U.S. antipersonnel “leaf bomb” is a raggedly shaped little device customarily painted in one of four colors, depending on the terrain: deep red for clay, green for planted fields, off-white for sandy soil and charcoal-colored for mud. So sensitive are these miniature bombs that they can be triggered by the touch of a child’s foot.
Are you listening? There’s a chemical laboratory at Pine Bluff, Arkansas, where government technicians devise bacteria and toxins suitable for infecting millions of people anywhere in the world. A pamphlet titled Military Biology and Biological Agents lists a number of diseases which can be distributed efficiently and quickly. Among them are cholera, diphtheria, staphylococcus food poisoning, tetanus, typhoid and gas gangrene.
Well, my friend, whether or not you choose to reply we’ve accumulated a quantity of thoughts and events worth classification. Suppose we register first, because this was the foulest night of an evil year, those U.S. soldiers in Vietnam whose features Heironymous Bosch delineated five centuries ago. List them just beneath the rulers responsible, whose names ought not to be forgotten: Johnson, Rusk, McNamara, Bundy, Rostow, Nixon, Laird, etc. Parenthetically, you might mention the satyagrahi whose nature exacts from him implicit obedience to the highest known law — that of conscience.
State that every particle of matter in the universe has some attraction for every other particle.
I suggest that you write with colored ink what we are taught by K’ung Fu-tzü: Each of us is meant to rescue the world.
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