Last month, Americans again had the opportunity to watch our President
stare into the teleprompter and confirm our secret fears that the nation
is heading down a dark and dangerous path.
George Bush and those that run Washington alongside him seem to have a
natural fondness for enemies, as well as some talent for attracting new
ones. Disturbingly, President Bush has recently made it clear that he sees
his administration as being "on a mission for God."
There is evidence of an "end times" interpretation of events within the
White House, whereby unconditionally backing Israel will lead to
Armageddon, which will lead to the Second Coming of Christ. Meanwhile, a
respected and growing segment of our Christian community - including Bill
Moyers and Jimmy Carter - are speaking out against such fundamentalist
interpretations (which the latter calls "foolish"), as they are clearly
formulas for pitting intolerant Christian and Jewish elements of society
against radical Islam; in a potential, worldwide, dead-end "Crusade."
Many, therefore, will likely interpret the phrase from the President's
recent speech, "We will finish the job of the fallen," to mean; at the end
of our present course, we, too, will be fallen. Our national goodwill will
be all but destroyed, our military assets will be useless against a
dispersed and vigorous "enemy," damage to our national economy will be
nearly total (in a recent NY Times article, former Treasury Secretary
Robert Rubin indicates that the American economy may right now be heading
down the same path as...Argentina).
During the last presidential campaign, when asked to name his "favorite
philosopher" in history George Bush answered, "Jesus." Yet, if we look at
the policies of his administration, we find the very opposite of the
qualities that Jesus counselled:
- arrogance versus humility
- strengthening the strong while weakening the weak
- selfishness and materialism versus selflessness and a spiritual approach
to life
- an inclination toward revenge instead of forgiveness
- a tendency toward competition versus cooperation
- disrespect rather than a deep-seated love for nature
- a tendency toward secretiveness and subterfuge versus honesty and
openness
It's not for nothing that Jesus advised, "By their fruits shall ye know
them." He and many other sage voices of history have counselled paying
close attention to what people actually do, versus listening only to their
words. George Bush and his administration talk a good game; patriotism,
Christianity. Yet, they are busy doing just about everything imaginable to
contradict the fundamental teachings both of the Founding Fathers and the
founder of their supposed faith.
"Leave no Child Behind" is poised to leave all American children behind.
The "Clear Skies Initiative" threatens to pollute our skies forever. The
"liberation" of Iraq is a hated occupation. "Compassionate conservatism"
is busy giving away the store to an already over-privileged elite. Right
down the line, there's the stark contrast between what's being said and
what's being done.
Here's what Walter Cronkite recently said about the situation, "One
sometimes gets the impression that this administration believes that how
it runs the government is its own business and no one else's. The tight
control of information, as well as the dissemination of misleading
information and outright falsehoods, conjures up a disturbing image of a
very different kind of society. Democracies are not well-run nor
long-preserved with secrecy and lies."
Okay, so GWB seems not to be following very well in the footsteps of his
favorite philosopher. Yet, we might ask, how does the Bush administration
stack up against that other pillar of loyalty continually evoked, national
patriotism? Well, let's consider what the Founding Fathers might have
said...
Given that they tended to identify with Masonry rather than Christianity,
that probably would have positioned them, right from the start, among the
misguided. They were against secrecy in government. They believed in the
separation of church and state; in freedom of speech and association; in
habeus corpus and freedom from arbitrary search and arrest. Benjamin
Franklin once said, "Those who are willing to forsake their civil
liberties for security, deserve neither." All that would have put them at
odds with the likes of George Bush, Dick Cheney, John Ashcroft, Don
Rumsfeld and various neo-con members of the present administration.
For those of us who take seriously the symbols of God and flag, the
following should be considered; the greatest crimes of history have always
been committed in the name either of the state, or religion, or both.
Hitler carried out his own evangelical programs for "the glory of the
Fatherland," whilst Nazi storm-troopers wore belt buckles which
proclaimed, "Gott mit Uns" ("God with us"). In the aftermath of WWII,
good-hearted Germans asked themselves how they might have avoided being
duped by such appeals to their patriotism and religious loyalty.
The President's favorite philosopher gave us a clue, long ago; "By their
fruits shall ye know them."
America, today, spends more on armaments and military than all the other
nations of the world, combined. We refuse to join treaties to protect
human rights and the environment that nearly all other nations endorse.
UNDP indicates that but a small fraction of our present military
expenditures could solve all the worst problems of human misery and
poverty, on a global basis. Yet, our administration seems rather
uninterested in this prospect. Identifying and pursuing enemies, instead,
has captured their interest (terrorists versus communists, this time
around).
Just imagine what GWB's favorite philosopher might have said about these
priorities.
Humanity confronts a fork in the road, today - one which must be
approached by drawing upon the best of our collective values and history.
Where I part company with fundamentalists and fanatics of all stripes -
political and religious - has to do with the idea that we can throw away
all the most cherished values taught by the founders of our creeds, while
claiming to be acting in their name.
James Wallerstedt speaks and writes about New Age and international topics, and is a former technology consultant. He may be reached at jw@gvinstitute.org
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