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The Ability to Kill Osama Bin Laden Does Not Make America Great
Osama Bin Laden, evil incarnate, has justified so, so much American violence in the 21st century. We have launched two wars and executed God knows how many covert military operations in the ethereal, never-ending fight he personifies. We have made racial profiling of Muslim Americans normative, turned an already broken immigration system into an arm of national defense, and reversed decades worth of hard-won civil liberties while pursuing him, dead or alive. We have abandoned even the conceit of respect for human rights in places stretching from Abu Ghraib to Guantanamo Bay in the course of hunting him down. Now, finally, the devil is dead.
Citizens hang off a lamp post cheering in celebration as thousands of people celebrate in the streets at Ground Zero. (Photo: Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
Upon the news of this victory, crowds gathered in front of the White House and at Ground Zero to chant “U.S.A.! U.S.A!” It was as if we’d just won an Olympic hockey game, rather than capped a decade worth of war and recession with a singular act of violence.
“Today’s achievement is a testament to the greatness of our country and the determination of the American people,” the president declared. “We are once again reminded that America can do whatever we set our mind to,” he concluded, after insisting that the execution represents justice. “That is the story of our history, whether it’s the pursuit of prosperity for our people, or the struggle for equality for all our citizens; our commitment to stand up for our values abroad, and our sacrifices to make the world a safer place.”
How perverse. President Obama is the leader of a nation in which justice is but a distant dream for millions of residents. He leads a nation that can afford billions of dollars annually for war but cannot feed the nearly 18 million children who lived in homes without food security in 2009. And yet, the Nobel Peace Prize winner can fix his mouth to say that killing a man on the other side of the globe provides proof of America’s exceptionalism.
The gap between rhetoric and reality has long been a defining trait of American life. Lies about our values have shielded us from the brutal facts of our nation ever since we built it on the back of genocide and slavery. But it is in times like these that the dissonance becomes unbearable.
The president says we can do anything we want because we can kill. We could not stop poverty rates from spiraling upward to a record-setting 14.3 percent of Americans in 2009, but we can kill so we are exceptional. One in four black and Latino families live below the poverty line now, and as a result America’s child poverty rate—one in five kids—is the second worst among rich nations, behind Mexico. But we can kill, so we are great.
Fourteen million Americans are out of work, nearly a third of them for more than a year. The Depression-like jobs crises in black neighborhoods around the country have become so acceptable as to be literally unremarkable in national news media. When overall joblessness inched downward in March, the fact that black unemployment increased, again, was greeted with callous shrugs from the White House to CNN. But America is exceptional because we can kill.
Our economy is defined by greed. The top 1 percent of earners take home a quarter of income in this country. Wall Street banks are logging record profits while the Treasury Department professes helplessness at the fact that tens of millions of people are still losing their homes to those banks. Because of that foreclosure crisis, the stunning racial wealth gap—the typical black family has a dime for a dollar of wealth held by its white counterpart—will surely grow worse. The White House is paralyzed with inaction in the face of all of these challenges. But it can kill, so we are great.
We have the world’s most expensive health care system, and yet in 2009 infant mortality in the U.S. was higher than in 29 other countries and the worst among rich nations. Why? In large part because the infant mortality rate is so high among black and Latina women. We cannot find justice for them, but we can kill and call it justice.
We have a $14 trillion deficit. A massive giveaway to defense contractors lurks inside that number—a transfer of public funds that has been justified, in ways both explicit and implicit, by the evil visage of Osama Bin Laden. And now, Washington is as likely as not to make up the loss by taking apart the safety net that once created something like economic justice in America. But the president would like us to agree that we are great because we can kill.
“May God bless the United States of America,” Obama declared last night, a sentiment echoed by so many today. Indeed. But the familiar refrain feels to me more like an urgent plea for forgiveness than the triumphant war cry that it is.
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85 Comments so far
Show AllI'm waiting now to see how the Right Wing Tea Party Republicans go about spinning to make the president to make him look bad about this.
Obama looks *good* to you????
This was no photoshop, just a matter of timing, which worked out well for Obama. So why should he not be proud of completing the task that was supposedly the reason why we went to war in the first place..?.. and he did in 3 years what bush couldn't do in 8...
Whether or not Osama really is dead, if the gov. claims he is then we should insist on ending our insurgency in the area fairly abruptly and bringing back our soldiers, since the root of the problem has been eliminated... I for one believe he is dead.
If people care about the whole giving Osama a trial dealeo then they are only insisting that we should waste even more money on a guy whose goal was to do just that, waste our money, time and energy. I for one am glad that the navy seal sent on this mission used a couple cheap bullets to circumvent millions more in trial costs and months of media frenzy by choosing the lesser of two evils.
Finally, this is a testament to the greatness of America for the simple reason that we have proven that no matter how far away, resourceful, charismatic, influential, determined, or funded you are there is nowhere the face of this planet you can hide where you cannot be found and held accountable for your actions, and in that sense we are the dealers of justice.
Unfortunately wars are unbelievably expensive, and despite our economic prowess for finding money in places never before thought of, we have turned a blind eye to domestic issues that have most certainly gotten out of hand. My thoughts are we should take advise from George Washington after the revolution had been won, when the American people needed a common goal more than ever. That advice would be to isolate our selves from foreign issues and lead by example, by working on our own domestic issues, this would include restoring liberty for all, doing away with the patriot act and holding corporations accountable for their actions (banks in particular) among other things..
Geronimo, you said:
"Finally, this is a testament to the greatness of America for the simple reason that we have proven that no matter how far away, resourceful, charismatic, influential, determined, or funded you are there is nowhere the face of this planet you can hide where you cannot be found and held accountable for your actions, and in that sense we are the dealers of justice."
If you believe this, and can honestly apply it to Bin Laden, it would seem equally applicable to the following: Bush, Cheney, Obama, Clinton, Rice, and others. There are many deaths they are accountable for!
Few in the CD forum believe that 911 was executed by Bin Laden. We do know that US wars of Empire have massacred thousands upon thousands, and left the detritus of depleted uranium behind; that is, when land mines and other deadly ordnance was not the residual case.
Your "true believer" stance wreaks of misplaced "patriotism," and you sound like a rather brainwashed uniformed soldier to me.
If you read what educated posters and published authors have to share, maybe you'll gain some insight. You need it. That you equate this spectacle of foreign assassination (and I think it's a ruse) with "liberty for all" is just plain sad.
Is Geronimo really your name? In the end Death will claim us all into her bosom even the "resourceful, charismatic, influential, determined, or funded" and even our "greatness".
In and out
Above, about, below.
Tis nothing but a magic show
Played in the box
Whose candle is the sun
Round which we phantom
Creatures come and go.
(apologies for not recollecting the author)
Geronimo, you say? As in "Operation Geronimo", the dubious handle under which this assassination was undertaken? Worth thinking about that choice of name. This reference (both in the name of the operation and your handle) would bear closer scrutiny by those with a much stronger stomach than I.
"..no matter how far away, resourceful, charismatic, influential, determined, or funded you are there is nowhere the face of this planet you can hide where you cannot be found and held accountable for your actions"
Except, perhaps, the Oval Office...
Judging from Wright's writing and by who he is, a black, I think he sees the "real world" a lot more clearly than most of us. And although I haven't been out of country for awhile, from all I've read and heard is that the real world outside has lost a lot of respect for us in the past ten years. Furthermore, I'll take The Nation's word on things political and social before almost all of MSM today.
And this "real" world you speak of is what exactly? Perhaps you might care to visit Potters Field, homeless shelters, inner cities, reservations?
When I watched all those young people shouting "U.S.A.! U.S.A.!" in front of the White House, as if this international assassination was a superbowl game, I wondered how many of them were willing to go to some military hell hole in Iraq or Afghanistan, themselves? How much of their time they spend in the "Real World" when it comes to the blood and destruction proliferated on behalf of this imaginery genesis of evil called, "Osama bin Laden" ?
A former C.I.A. agent gone lunatic. Not that many of them aren't, already. Living in the *real world* as they do.
This entire manhunt, the lengths to which our government has gone, to get this one individual on the other side of the planet, and people like yourself buying their *Ticket to the Show*, is a great example of how you do not live in the world, along with our leadership.
If they can *get* Osama bin Laden, if they can instantly declare one military budget after the next, if the possibilities for Americans are so numerous upon this *victory*, then why can we not get out of Iraq and Afghanistan, put all Americans wanting, back to work, eliminate homelessness in the U.S., open an improved Medicare to the entire country, expand social security, make a debt free college and graduate school education a reality for every student willing to do the academic work ?? Make doctors, not soldiers?
That is the real world. Not "Osama bin Laden" dumped in the Arabian Sea.
All that silly flagwaving-- for what? This could have meant something if it happened 10 years ago. Osama bin Laden is pretty much irrelevant any more-- the US's actions over the last 10 years have solidified opposition to the US so much in the middle east that he is not needed-- many more radicals have been spawned. None of the original grievances have been addressed-- ie, the US's imperialist boots stomping all over their lands. If anything it is far worse now.
"But the familiar refrain feels to me more like an urgent plea for forgiveness than the triumphant war cry that it is."
if only it were such a plea.
dream on.
I sometimes have doubts about the intelligence of an American public that lets itself be conned into financing corporate wars, often with the blood of their own children.
ezeflyer, you should not have any doubts about the intelligence of the American Public. It's closed to zero!
Thank you Kai for the very thoughtful and articulate piece. This subject should be something for all of us to think about. When does one celebrate a death? Who celebrates and encourages death? Why is one death more or less horrific than another's?
Will this one act make all the killing stop? Will the unlimited greed of the Industrial Military Complex , or the seemingly limitless ideas of conquests of the Oil Companies ever let it stop? When all is said and done….. ”One tin-soldier walks away”.
Dogface, your first paragraph questions were all my initial thoughts as I saw the news broadcasts this morning about OBL and then the hoopla at the landmark commemorating the fall of the Twin Towers. I think those questions encompass a "justice vs vengeance" viewpoint. How do the deaths at that Pakistani compound constitute any sort of a justice? The whole spectacle makes me sick.
Necrophilia is just the Empire's version of self-love.
And that doesn't even touch on the whole range of questions that the non-production of OBL's body, his convenient death vs capture, prior reports of his death years ago and non-forensic 'investigation" of 9/11 engenders.
Originally, I'd hoped that the election of Obama was the culmination of the long-deferred hopes of a generation that had seen Dr. King gunned down. It's turned out that Obama is on the side of the assassins, on the side of the folks who made the napalm and the Agent Orange. Oh, yes, and "there were no civilian casualties". Of COURSE there were no civilian casualties, there never are, because any casualties, by definition, are not civilians, when they fall to our bombs and bullets . .. .
Yes, that Osama bin Laden dude was really such a sweet guy ...
SAINT-JUST: Poignant, powerful post. Thank you.
DONNY DON: Whether Bin Laden was naughty or nice is not the issue. He was a convenient fall guy, and his "sudden" death is about as convincing, and/or lawful as gunning Saddam down in a rat hole. And how the West loves to speak about its respect for law and its love of liberty. PU Lease!
Wasn't Bin Laden a civilian? Do we now categorize cilvilians into "good" and "bad" groups for killing purposes?
Here are my thoughts on the death of Bin Laden.
My first reaction was one of relief.
Finally, I thought, the long nightmare of the past and its attendant malaise is over and the U.S. can be #1 again!! I don't know about the rest of you, but the creeping, un-American suspicion that perhaps we weren't #1 had been growing in me for some time. I think it must have started when we elected a black man president.
Anyway, all that changed this morning when I woke to the news that Osama Bin Laden had been killed, news delivered by that same black president who first occasioned my and so many others' doubts about our greatness as a country. Could any clearer confirmation of America's not merely superpower but super-duper-power status be needed? I mean, President Obama wasn't even officially an American citizen until a week ago, and yet here he was, still black but overflowing with all the divine-power that our Special Friend in the Sky invests the newly Americanized with, affirming quite rightly that it "is a testament to the greatness of our country" that we can kill a guy. He was right. And by the end of his speech, I was positively swelling with pride from my newfound sense of American purpose. I mean, if we can kill one guy, think of how many more guys we can kill.
Here is to the tiny little dicked Trolls that have joined us here in our conversations. You are always soooooo out of the loop. Ya all get so befuddled and angry that ya all got so "short" changed, and you are so fun to watch as you turn red and blow up and self immolate right before our eyes. :) :) :)
Ummm...I'm not a troll. That was satire. Clearly I failed to make that clear.
So killing bin laden is worth how many points? Jesus, this is so gross. Now that the hunt is over and they stashed the body in the Arabian Sea so all of the evidence is gone, who did they really shoot? And now the debate boils down to when are our troops coming home? The envelope please....
I got it; thank you.
Good satire, even if Dogface didn't get it. And I like Wright making the point that Obama's casting of what this means for America is that we're great because his government can commit to killing, over and over, whenever they set their minds to it. This is all that makes America "great" now, and it's been so for a verrrrry long time.
We're great at murder. We're great at projecting what is the very worst about ourselves--that we kill habitually all over the globe, which makes us the world's true terrorists--onto others. Our entire denial mechanism is rooted in how vehemently we call our enemies terrorists, while the rest of the world knows we're the only real terrorists around.
This is all we have left to offer the world: that we can hunt them down, even if it takes a decade and costs us trillions of $, effectively bankrupting us, and kill them dead if they fail to obey us in any way whatsoever. Osama got uppity, so he had to be our Super Villain. He was incensed that the US had military bases in Saudi Arabia, the HQ of Islam, and meant to do something about it. But nobody does ANYTHING about the USA, if they fail to grasp our greatness by defying us.
Obama's speech was an open admission that the US now defines itself strictly as a military compound, and is willing to make good on its threats to kill anyone anywhere anytime just to drive home the symbolism. "We're Number One," no matter how empty of meaning, how bankrupt of new ideas, how morally and spiritually degenerate and repugnant to the rest of the world. Our self-image is delusionally intact. So let's all celebrate the assassination of Osama and get drunk. Here's a toast to Obama bin-Laden!
EPHRAIM: I think your post is powerful apart from one item, and yes, I do appear to harp on it. However, I feel it is THAT important. When we speak of "we," as if a consensus stands behind the ruins and ravages of Empire, it presumes that those of us who dissent (and for all we know, that may be the majority, even a silent majority intimidated by this very vile & equally violent government) actually condone these lawless, amoral, grotesquely mistaken actions.
It's high time that more and more posted, spoke out, and used banners to state that they do NOT give their consent! This is NOT my America! This is a land under siege, ownership by those who intent upon furthering every craven idea while defacing, when not debasing, every sacred ideal.
Any notion of "WE" does NOT include me. And yes, I realize I live here, and yes, I realize I do still use some gas for my car (but I do not drive often these days), etc. However, the sooner citizens disassociate themselves from the notion that they BACK these atrocious actions, the sooner a new ethos can emerge!
As Galen said, "Non serviam," and as another poster stated, "Not Going Along" ... Ownership of the WE pronoun reinforces what has no basis in truth.
Thank you for the reminder about the power of our word selections. I'm glad your pointwoman for this. Words matter. Words hurt. Words heal. The words we tell ourselves shape our beliefs and our beliefs shape our actions. It is time to hold ourselves apart from the actions of Empire by not identifying with it in the first person plural. This is part of why I appreciate Alan MacDonald and others constantly reminding us of Empire. To name Empire is to begin to define, contain and diminish it.
I was expecting that, to be honest. When I wrote the above I knew I was using the "we" in the general sense it's used, but that I wasn't meaning it literally, as in "all Americans believe" . . . or, "we all bomb Pakistan and everywhere else when we feel the itch to kill," and probably I was being too lazy to stop saying we when I meant this corporatized government and all its operatives.
Yet, if I went to Pakistan, or Iraq, or Afghanistan, or to about 20 other Arab countries that hate Americans, everyone there would associate me with what the US does to them, just routinely every day. Unless I was well protected I probably wouldn't last two days over there. None of us would, even those of us like you and me and most others who comment on CD who openly loathe and consciously disassociate ourselves from this government's perpetual lawlessness. That's what official US policy has done to us.
Look at orchard keeper/readbetweenthelines's constant spewing of hatred and vitriol for ALL norteamericanos, no matter what any of us say. We're her eternal enemy and there's nothing we can SAY to redeem ourselves, because we're gringos. That mindset is duplicated all over the world because of this country's barbaric policies in service to corporate capital and Empire. Many of them know there are some Americans who don't support this country's outlaw policies, for which it is literally never accountable. But they probably assume it's such a tiny minority as not to warrant concern. For them, we would most likely be a part of the "we" that writers on these subjects conventionally identify when writing about US policies that reduce their societies to ruin. I don't consider myself any part of the "we" Americans who are destroying the planet, bit by bit. But that doesn't change how THEY see me.
well put. I have never liked the empirical "we" but it exists to give legitimacy to "them"
Ask the Native Americans, homeless, and unemployed about "We". The USofA may be defined by its physical bounderies but not its collective point of view. We demonize Bin Laden and celebrate Christopher Colombus, arguably one of the most murderous sociopaths of history. Alas.
I appreciate your heartfelt disgust at the hatred and death Empire spreads in our names.
I don't know about everyone else but images and video in the media like that photo above for this article just reminds me so much of those manic, fervent, hyped-up crowds of peoples from other countries when they hear news of somebody they don't like being killed.
Like frenzied apes thrashing about in trees in a frothy-mouthed display of mindless fear & hatred and shrieking exultation.
I can still remember my horror when i first saw the photos of Sadam H. in that spider hole and then the front page announcing he was executed.....Like we were supposed to rejoice......But no one did. I guess this is different.
And so much for a person presumed innocent until proven guilty...He was never given a "day in court". If our seals could gain entry to the compound and escape the compound with bin Laden's corpse, they could just have easily captured him, escaped, and rendered him alive for trial, hopefully, in a world court. I have doubts about the facts that we are being told.
For me, this is it in a nutshell. What's to celebrate? That we're not defined by Law? That we barbarously conduct mass executions without evidence? That yet again, lies to us by our government and shill press are indicated by the glaring omissions of details? For me, it's like a twisted pointellist "Portrait of Dorian Gray" . Too many of the other points that compose Dorian (USA) face can't see what the rest of us( world at large) sees when the mirror is held up: that Dorian isn't that bright shiny new kid on the block that held so much potential, he's a depraved, indifferent, destructive, narcissistic, diseased contagion.
The Ability to Kill Osama Bin Laden Does Not Make America Great
Or even prove that the USA will survive another 25, 50 or 100 years with peak oil; and, to peak, population; but we'll have scored a really lot of kills, on the continued race to the bottom.
Take a step back and see the truth as is. If Laden had okeyed the oil pipe line we would not have had our Reichstag as an excuse to invade Afghanistan, and if Saddam had obeyed Bush Sr.'s command, Bush JR, would not have lied to invade Iraq, and a million have died, because the Bushes seek revenge if they are told NO.-- Our country has become the Germany of 1934. to 1945. We are the invaders, it was the CIA who grouped together the Al Qaeda, and had the Taliban on the payroll. Take a good look at what has happened in the past 10 years and go back to 1934 Germany and see the same play acting out. We even had the wealthy behind the American Liberty League just like the fascist wealthy behind the Tea Party of today,--
and the same hate / discrimination against a nation of people, and the deliberate neverending wars to conquer for OIL,
Why the intent to kill? Why no trial? What right did we have to enter a foreign country to commit assassination? Is this the acts of a civilized nation?
"Hate begets hate; violence begets violence; toughness begets a greater toughness. We must meet the forces of hate with the power of love."
-Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
What gave Osama the right to plot acts of violence that resulted in deaths around the world? So, should we have just let him live on to do more? I think not! Perhaps we have forgotten that this man is a murderer. Let's hunt down all these criminals and remove them from the face of the earth. We don't need to stay in Afghanistan and Iraq to do this. Then we can again focus on helping our own citizens and then not illegal aliens. Remember, the key word is ILLEGAL.
The headline on this story is very good. It explains exactly what is wrong with the United States today.
Anybody who really looks at United States history, however, can see that what's going on here in the USA has been a long time coming....since day one. Get the drift?
So Bin Laden was buried at sea.
I guess its better than tying people to cannons and blowing them to pieces as the British did to Indians in revolt. We've become practically civilised
Another powerful poem. Not even intentional.
Great article Mr. Wright. You really captured things as they are.
This was a really powerful, well written poem. In my opinion, it is the best you have offered us Orchard Keeper. I read the poem not realized you had posted it, as usually I find most of what you write vitriolic to most of us here. I've wondered why you post here in the past,as your posts indicate we haven't much to offer you. I suspect now you lash out in grief to those psychically closest to you. Time will tell. Peace. minnow
I'm pretty sure it's the first time I've responded to one of her comments directly. And it was a compliment. I have read other of her comments. I don't believe I felt strongly enough about her comments to nitpick but that doesn't mean they don't register. Maybe I've missed other threads where OK posts comments I would agree with. Hard to say without the SEARCH capacity CD used to have. Wish they'd bring that feature back because I lack higher bookmarking skills and I already wish the day was 28 or so hours long without adding that to the list.
I guess I should reconsider thinking out loud the way I did after I enjoyed OK's poem. That's all.
Just so you know, I too grieve for justice. That is why I wish all peace because then we'd enjoy both peace and justice.
Beautiful, Orchard Keeper. Perhaps it will come to pass that in the end all of our misinterpretations of Life: The sense of separateness, the cruelties and injustice, will serve as compost with which to cultivate the soil for the next world.
The capacity to kill anywhere is now very great.
A capacity to heal is far too small to compensate.
The United States of America have lost an old boogie man.
and are still in self-destruction mode according to plan.
Some dissidents have gained yet another martyr
the occupation of Kabul can still end in disaster.
Luke: "I seek a great warrior"
Yoda "War does not make one great"