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Correcting Those Sins of Omission

by Pat LaMarche

Don’t you hate it when you are wrong, when you do or say or support the wrong thing. Of course if you’re one of the 19 percent of this country who still thinks the U.S. is on the right track then you probably don’t believe you’ve ever been wrong. But for the rest of us, occasionally, it happens.Sometimes being wrong doesn’t manifest itself as an action or a deed. Some times we’re wrong because of something undone or unsaid. My mom called such things “sins of omission.”

A glance at this week’s emergency supplemental bill before Congress shows that we will likely pump $170 billion more into that Iraq-Afghanistan abyss we call war. And as I read the measure it’s plain that over the past few years I have been telling only half the truth.

I’ve often said that we, the United States, don’t learn from our mistakes. And that’s only half true.

It’s also pretty obvious that we don’t learn from our successes either.

I can’t apologize enough for leaving that second half out.

I don’t think we should fund the war. I want it to end. If we learned from past successes we would see that once Congress stopped funding Vietnam, that war’s days were numbered. But that’s not the only success story from which we refuse to learn.

If you read the pending supplemental funding bill you will see more than military appropriations listed there. It has admonishments too: kind of like little reminders of what we do want to do - and don’t want to do - with the money we allocate now or in the future. And one of the conditions listed in the bill is that Iraq must pay for its own reconstruction.

Let’s see if I can come up with a good analogy for this thinking.

First I need something really immoral. How about selling heroin to 14-year-olds. The part of the drug seller will be played by Halliburton and Blackwater and all those other no-bid defense contractors who set their price as high as they want while we, like the little war addicts that we are, just pay and pay to get our fix.

And when our congresspersons meet the “suppliers” behind the shrimp cocktail at some fancy congressional function to square the deal, these buyers — desperate for another hit — say with shaking hands and even shakier moral integrity, “Now you know, you can’t expect us to pay for rehab! We don’t want to quit using — we just want more heroin in the middle schools.”

No money for reconstruction? Just money for war!

Maybe you differ with this premise and don’t believe that the five-year unprovoked senseless killing in Iraq compares to selling heroin to 14-year-olds. Well, fine, let’s agree to disagree.

And we will get back to the original premise that the United States is incapable of learning from its successes.

Even if you’re one of the 40 percent of Americans who, according to a recent USA Today poll, want to stay the course in Iraq, you’ve got to admit that breaking that country and expecting it to pay to repair the damage ignores one of our nation’s finest success stories.

When we invested in the Marshall plan we, to a large extent, rebuilt a part of the world that tried to destroy our way of life. And it wasn’t cheap. The New Yorker magazine estimates that the $13 billion spent on post-World War II European reconstruction would have equaled $720 billion today. And though the British fought beside us, Germany and Italy were our mortal enemies. But we didn’t discriminate. We simply rebuilt them all.

Shortsighted victors like those after World War I would have expected the villains to repair their devastation without assistance and thereby assured another war.

A couple of days ago I stood in the sand in front of the German memorial to Field Marshal Erwin Rommel and his desert campaign against the Allies in Egypt. The 3,000 or so German soldiers buried in the sand died on orders from their obscene government. Still, we resurrected their homeland.

Now Congress would prohibit helping the victims of a war we started.

All this hard-earned history of ours and we clearly haven’t learned anything.

Pat LaMarche of Yarmouth is the spokeswoman for the Evergreen Mountain Resort & Casino referendum campaign. She is the author of “Left Out in America” and may be reached at PatLaMarche@hotmail.com.

© 2008 The Bangor Daily News

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9 Comments so far

  1. BugsBBunny III May 14th, 2008 1:07 pm

    There was money for reconstruction. A huge amount, hundreds of billions that went instead for no bids and corrupt cronies. It was there that the damage we see in Iraq now was created.
    We sent a marshall plan but it got diverted into pockets instead.

    That is Bush’s legacy.

  2. militantliberal May 14th, 2008 1:27 pm

    Because whatever we build or rebuild may become a target, there may not be much point to paying for reconstruction until after we pull out and the fighting among Iraqis settles down. And by then we’ll have forgotten there was a war or a need for reconstruction.

  3. frank1569 May 14th, 2008 2:30 pm

    “I don’t think we should fund the war.”

    “We” are not, in fact, funding any wars, because The United States of America is not at “war” with any country on Earth.

    “We” are, however, funding an illegal occupation in one country, and military operations in, oh, about 100 other countries, and also in space.

    “I’ve often said that we, the United States, don’t learn from our mistakes.” Really? Like calling an illegal invasion and occupation a “war,” and then wondering why so many grant “war powers” or “Commander In Chief” powers to one of history’s most notorious gang of lying, thieving criminals?

  4. randolfski May 14th, 2008 5:20 pm

    Whew, thanks pat for those metaphors. I think metaphors are something
    many can understand whereas words alone tend to get confusing. Our
    country does not learn from its errors or its successes. This is also called
    the definition of insanity. And unfortunately, insane people cannot be swayed
    by logic or reason. This is why a revolution, or maybe an evolution, is the only answer.

  5. guevara May 14th, 2008 5:53 pm

    “abyss we call war” Perhaps we should stop calling it a war and start calling it what it is - an invasion .

  6. Barn Burner May 14th, 2008 9:17 pm

    The Marshall plan was a total success but the U.S. didn’t do too bad. WE gave Europe the money but they had to use “no bid contracts” that is, they had to buy from the U.S. so maybe we could get the hell out of Iraq, give Iraq the money on the condition they buy from us. Here the fly in the ointment, if we get out there is a chance they will get their shit together as group of dissimilar people and start selling oil from their own version of ARAMCO thus telling the U.S. “thanks, we don’t need your charity and get your infidel troops off our lands.

  7. vaudree May 15th, 2008 12:40 am

    I would like to see an article on the “sins of convention” where you do the conventional expected thing and get screwed over because of it.

  8. dlnelson7 May 15th, 2008 10:44 am

    We would have been better to hire Iraqi companies to rebuild putting them to work and helping them feed their selves.

  9. John Freeman May 15th, 2008 12:58 pm

    Iraq is Disaster Capitolism at it’s finest and I think no matter how botched up it looks to us, it is running exactly as planned. During the chaos, Billions upon billions of our assets, as well as assets properly belonging to the Iraq people are being looted. I doubt there is an accurate tally of the barrels of oil that are loaded on tankers coming this way, not to speak of the Opium base for the Heroin that will end up on our streets. Money is the motivator for Republicans everywhere and there is plenty of it there for the taking. Moving public money into private hands seems to be the goal of the Republican party operatives.

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