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"Silence
is a key form of cooperation, but the war-making system does not insist on
quietude or agreement. Mere passivity or self-restraint will suffice to
keep the missiles flying, the bombs exploding and the faraway people
dying."
"We can't
just blame the media conglomerates and Washington spinners for the
prevailing stupor. After decades of desensitizing propaganda, we routinely
crave the insulation that news outlets offer. We tell ourselves that our
personal lives are difficult enough without getting too upset about world
events."
"You root for your country. No matter how horrific its actions."
"The
Pentagon's firepower will destroy uncounted human beings in Iraq during
what will be, to put it mildly, a war of aggression."
"Judgments at Nuremberg and precepts of international law forbid launching
aggressive war -- an apt description of what the U.S. government has in
store for Iraqi people this spring."
"The
deadening lockstep of obedience is easier to fault in other societies.
Close to home, as the adrenaline of unfathomable violence pulses through
the televisions of America, the siren of deference to authority may seem
irresistible. But it isn't."
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As the possibility of a U.S. invasion turns
into the reality of massive carnage, the war on
Iraq cannot avoid confronting Americans with a
tacit expectation that rarely gets media scrutiny. In a word:
obedience.
When a country -- particularly "a democracy" -- goes to war, the
passive consent of the governed lubricates the machinery of
slaughter. Silence is a key form of cooperation,
but the war-making system does not insist on
quietude or agreement. Mere passivity or self-restraint will
suffice to keep the missiles flying, the bombs exploding and the
faraway people dying.
On the home front, beliefs are of scant importance. Antiwar
sentiment is necessary but insufficient to halt a war. Much more is
needed than expressions of dissent that stay within the customary
bounds.
Daily media speculation about the starting date for all-out war on
Iraq has contributed to widespread passivity -- a kind of spectator
relationship to military actions being implemented in our names.
We can't just blame the media conglomerates and Washington spinners
for the prevailing stupor. After decades of desensitizing
propaganda, we routinely crave the insulation
that news outlets offer. We tell ourselves that
our personal lives are difficult enough without getting
too upset about world events.
The conventional wisdom of American political life has made it
predictable that editorial writers and politicians cannot resist
accommodating themselves to expediency by the time the first
missiles reach Baghdad. Conformist behavior --
in sharp contrast to authentic conscience -- is
notably plastic.
A pathetic case in point is Sen. John Kerry, the Massachusetts
Democrat who voted for the congressional war resolution last
October while trying to pass himself off as a
critic of President Bush's enthusiasm for war.
While campaigning in Iowa recently for his party's
presidential nomination, Kerry told a New York Times reporter:
"When the war begins, if the war begins, I
support the troops and I support the United
States of America winning as rapidly as possible. When the troops
are in the field and fighting -- if they're in the field and
fighting -- remembering what it's like to be
those troops, I think they need a unified
America that is prepared to win."
Prepared to win. Such a phrase rolls off an oily tongue with ease.
As a consequence, of course, many blameless people must die.
Howard Dean, a former governor of Vermont, is supposedly an antiwar
candidate for the Democratic presidential slot. On the campaign trail in
Iowa, he "stopped short when asked what he would say if there was a
war," according to the Times.
"You know, I don't know the answer to that yet," Dean said.
"Certainly I'm going to support American kids that are sent over
there. Obviously, I'm going to wish everybody
well. You know, you root for your country."
You root for your country. No matter how horrific its actions.
Billions of buds on countless flowers and trees will wondrously
open across the United States during the next weeks. Meanwhile, the
Pentagon's firepower will destroy uncounted human beings in Iraq
during what will be, to put it mildly, a war of
aggression.
Judgments at Nuremberg and precepts of international law forbid
launching aggressive war -- an apt description of what the U.S.
government has in store for Iraqi people this spring.
"We must make clear to the Germans that the wrong for which their
fallen leaders are on trial is not that they lost the war, but that
they started it," said Supreme Court Justice
Robert L. Jackson, a U.S. representative to the
International Conference on Military Trials at the
close of World War II. He added that "no grievances or policies
will justify resort to aggressive war. It is
utterly renounced and condemned as an instrument
of policy."
Last November, more than 300 law professors in the United States
signed a statement pointing out that "the international rule of law
is not a soft luxury to be discarded whenever
leaders find it convenient or popular to resort
to savage violence."
The deadening lockstep of obedience is easier to fault in other
societies. Close to home, as the adrenaline of unfathomable
violence pulses through the televisions of
America, the siren of deference to authority may
seem irresistible. But it isn't.
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Norman Solomon is executive
director of the Institute for Public
Accuracy (I'd recommend a visit to the site), a nationwide consortium
of public-policy researchers. He has written op-ed pieces for Boston
Globe, Washington Post, Newsday, New York Times,
Miami Herald, Los Angeles Times, USA Today and Baltimore
Sun, and is a far more successful writer than Alex Sandell will ever
be. His column, normally titled, "Media Beat," is nationally
syndicated in a wide variety of newspapers. If you'd like to see
his weekly "Media Beat" column published on the opinion page
of your local daily newspaper(s), please contact the opinion-page editor
at the paper(s) and suggest that the paper give his column a try. Please
mention to editors that his weekly column is available to newspapers from
Creators Syndicate. "Target Iraq: What the News Media Didn't
Tell You," by Norman Solomon and Reese
Erlich, has just been published as a paperback original by Context
Books. The introduction is by Howard Zinn and the afterword is by
Sean Penn. For the prologue to the book and
other information, go to:
http://www.contextbooks.com/newF.html |