Have Americans grown numb to numbers?
Yes, we all wept on September 11, 2001, when we heard
that 2,973 people died in New York and Washington and Pennsylvania terrorist attacks. But now, we just sip our coffee while reading
that 2,896 American soldiers have died, to date, in Afghanistan and Iraq. Now we just reach for the toast while reading that,
officially, 20,000 American soldiers have been wounded.
Truly, counting the wounded and the dead is little
more than a monotonous drumbeat, thrumming in monthly,
weekly, and daily notations on the evening news, just
before we hear about the weekend weather. Really, how
often do we hear the newscaster say, "Another solider
died in Iraq today" and then weep?
I don't fault us. Not entirely, anyway. Making us numb
to numbers is presumably part of a calculated public
relations campaign sponsored by the White House or the Department of Defense. You just know that some young lawyer with a gift for
political spin, sitting in some small basement office in downtown Washington D.C., has polled the numbers about numbers and knows
damn well that, over time, a steady sound of counting the dead becomes nothing but wistful white noise, numbers that - even when
they refer to murder - no longer have any relationship to people.
Just the other day, I listened as CNN reported on the
Johns Hopkins' findings that clinically suggested
654,000 Iraqi's have died, to date, as a consequence
of the US invasion and occupation of Iraq.
Were we collectively moved to tears by this news? No.
We patiently waited for more dirty revelations about Congressman Foley's sex life.
Meantime, in that same CNN television report, some multi-medaled US Lt.Col. was asked about the Johns Hopkins' findings. He
expressed moderate surprise at the findings' estimate of Iraqi dead - but he was hardly nonplussed. He just shrugged and suggested
without emotion that he believed the actual number of Iraqi dead to be perhaps "only 50,000."
Perhaps only 50,000?
I wasn't sure which was more horrifying: the
multi-medaled US Lt. Col. being so far off in his
estimate, or the multi-medaled US Lt. Col. saying that
perhaps "only 50,000" Iraqis were dead as a
consequence of US actions, without throwing up behind
the podium.
Worse still, in the days that followed the Johns
Hopkins announcement, as the story made the media
circuit and then began its descent in to dark trivia,
hardly a ripple of revulsion appeared across America.
Have we become that numb to numbers?
Consider: because of our direct actions as a nation,
654,000 pairs of eyes will no longer look with wonder
at a sunrise. 654,000 pairs of ears will no longer
hear the song of birds in spring. Because of our
direct actions as a nation, 654,000 hearts will no
longer beat faster with the excitement of falling in
love.
Please spare me the letters and lectures about these
dead Iraqis being nothing more than muted terrorists
and extremists who would have brought their Jihad to
America. And please spare me the letters and lectures
about the living Iraqis now being better off. GOP
geopolitics and Neo-con polemics be damned. If 654,000
people were killed in any other country as a
consequence of the actions of any other nation, we
would certainly call it genocide. 800,000 people were
killed in Rwanda and we called it genocide. 400,000
people have been killed so far in Darfur and we call
it genocide.
Because of our direct actions as a nation, 654,000
Iraqis are dead - so far. How can we accept this
American made meat grinder, this Iraqi genocide? How
can we remain numb to these numbers?
In truth, as an American, I have to believe that we
cannot. I have to believe that, as Americans, we feel
the human consequences of our actions, that, as
Americans, we feel the loss we have rained down upon
the Iraqis - and that, as Americans, we feel we must
make amends.
In just weeks, yet again, another election will be
held. And as with the elections before it, this one is
yet another opportunity to stop enabling this
genocide. This election is yet another opportunity to
regain our sanity and our humanity.
At its best, despite its dark times and its dark acts,
America has never been a nation that remained numb to
numbers. Rather, at its best, America was, and should
be again, a nation that looks upon the tired, the
poor, and the huddled masses of the world community,
with compassion and empathy.
As such, as a nation, let us feel these numbers - the
Iraqi dead and the American dead. And then, as a
nation, let us make amends.
Steven Laffoley (stevenlaffoley@yahoo.ca) is an
American writer living in Halifax, Nova Scotia. He is the author of Mr. Bush, Angus and Me: Notes of an American-Canadian in the Age of Unreason.
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