9/11 was said to be more a failure of imagination than intelligence - the implication
being that no one could imagine planes being intentionally flown into buildings.
(As it turns out there were several people who not only imagined it, but also
knew it was a weapon of choice for some.) As we listen to Bush and his handlers
do their infomercial for war in Iraq, the challenge again seems to be more to
our imagination than to our intelligence.
Bush demands respect in direct proportion to his inability to earn it. His
slip during his petulant address to the UN on September 12th outed him. As he
patronizingly assured the assembly that he wanted the UN to succeed he said, "We
want the UN to be effective and respectful...." One imagines that his speech writer
intended him to say, "We want the UN to be 'respected'" but the bad actor blurted
out the subtext, which was and is, "Be respectful." And it's easy to imagine that
the subtext to "Be respectful" is "Just do what we tell you to do."
Bush warned the UN that if they aren't "respectful" they will become irrelevant.
And recent history shows that according to the Bush cabal the Florida Supreme
Court is irrelevant; voting rights are irrelevant; black voters are irrelevant;
Congress is irrelevant; The Constitution is inconvenient and irrelevant and now
the UN will become irrelevant. Even as we are told that all of this military leveraging
is for the American people, we are becoming irrelevant. Apart from hoping that
we lack the imagination needed to confront them, our main virtues to them are
our vulnerability to being manipulated and our consumption of fuel.
After our experience of 9/11, we don't have to imagine thousands of Iraqi civilians
being blown apart. We have a frame of reference for it. Even before we consider
the civilians who could well become soldiers as the streets of Baghdad turn into
battlegrounds, we should not fail to acknowledge that the actual soldiers in Iraq
are sons and husbands and friends - they have potential for joy and love - and
they will be devastated as they do what their cornered fate has bid them to do.
Protect the regime and the homeland. It is no less than what our soldiers would
be asked to do if our homeland were invaded.
It's sad to feel compelled to state the obvious - that human beings feel loss
in Iraq as much as they feel loss here - that there are faces of grief there as
well as here - that Iraqi citizens may well be holding pictures of their husbands,
wives, brothers, sons and sisters as they search for them through smoldering rubble.
We've seen those images on the streets of New York. We don't have to imagine it
we just have to expand our experience to include - them.
As Bush wraps himself in a Christian cloak his actions and rhetoric again insult
the integrity of his political hero's message. Love your enemy - Do unto others
as you would have them do unto you - Let he who is without sin cast the first
stone - Before you worry about the speck in your brother's eye take the log out
of your own. To Bush Jesus is a banner, not a person or a spiritual reality that
has actual application in this world.
As Rumsfeld, Cheney and Bush rattle off the laundry list of crimes that require
us to invade Iraq one can imagine other countries at different times in our history
who might have thought it would be time to take away our ability for self-determination.
From the treatment of Native Americans, to slavery, to women not having the vote
until 1920 - to capital punishment - there could have been and could be a country
that might make a case for invasion. In fact, right now it would not be hard to
imagine countries that believe we should have a regime change.
There are those who wonder if the 9/11 hijackers saw their mission as a pre-emptive
strike. Imagine if each one of the hijackers, whose pictures we have seen often,
were put on trial posthumously. Imagine the investigation of each internal evolution
that put them on those planes and into criminal and political history. The most
lethal weapons of mass destruction resided in the hearts and minds of those men.
Their posthumous trials might well be the most valuable form of weapons inspection
we could ever imagine.
At this exact moment we are debating the ostensible reasons for the invasion
of Iraq. Critical thinkers here and around the world, using their imagination,
resist these ostensible reasons. They imagine that our leaders are hyping dramas
so they can make deals with Iraq's oil. If what they imagine is true, then the
discussion turns sharply.
The invasion of Iraq becomes less about liberation and security and becomes
more like a hostile takeover. To imply that our commander-in-chief would use our
military as if it were a hit man for a corporate mob action has to remain, for
most, unimaginable. The only response from the administration to this theory has
to be red-faced indignation and outrage. Anything less would make them available
for impeachment.
The other day, a friend from New York came up to the country and stood with
a neighbor of mine looking out over a great Connecticut hill. The New York friend
said, "It's a beautiful country." The neighbor said, "It could be." The friend
looked at the neighbor for an explanation. The neighbor added, "If we put our
foot down." It feels like a helpless concept: citizens, supposedly in the minority,
putting our foot down to demand a beautiful country. 9/11 has stretched the limits
of our imagination - and now the push for war in Iraq - what motivates it and
how to stop it will make demands of both our commitment and our imagination.
Bill C. Davis is a playwright http://www.billcdavis.com/
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