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Unused and Probably Unusable

-- a linguistically inclined blawg

On Iraq, and what to do about it: get involved
I haven't commented directly on the War Against Iraq on this blawg before. I've touched on it, lots. It reflects on the judgment of the administration. It kills our best and brightest. It sours the world on us, particularly the Arab world but not at all confined to the region. It's expensive. It was wrongly justified. It was badly planned and poorly executed, despite great sacrifice by our troops on the ground. It's a disaster, and worse, it was a predictable disaster. Look, we predicted it. QED.

Consider this statement of faith by Roger Cohen of the Int'l Herald Tribune in the NYT:
Because I believe the net impact of American power, mistakes notwithstanding, over the past century has been a freer, more open, more accountable and more rewarding world, I am inclined to heed Petraeus rather than the Democrats in the House.
"The Biggest U.S. Error in Ousting Saddam," April 27, 2007 NYT (Select only, requires password).

Big words. Hard to fault him for his faith. Fine. But I will not willy-nilly go along with Cohen's unwillingness to change horses when he's halfway - can he even say halfway? - into an ocean.

Because I believe the net impact of American military power, successes notwithstanding, over the past 5 years has been a more terrified, more dangerous, more anti-American, and generally closer-to-killing me world, I am inclined to cut Bush no slack whatsoever until he shows some tendency to have a better idea than the Democrats.

His contra-timetable argument is brilliant rhetoric. It's nonsense, of course, because a deadline could be hopeful, for our troops and allies and for all Iraqis (except the ones who will die when we leave...) as easily as it could be an aid to insurgents - or, if you prefer, terrorists.

Bush has been reactive. He reacted to 9/11 by unleashing Cheney's pet plan to invade an unrelated but irksome country. He reacted to Abu Ghraib by condemning the effect on our troops. He reacted to troop deaths, caused by his actions and his commanders' decisions, defensively. He reacted to criticism as poorly as any President in my memory. I had no faith in hm before 9/11. I put faith in him that week because I had to, but I did not feel good about his hawkish instincts.

The same immoral, un-Christian, wrongheaded, perverse, murderous, vicious, foolish, ugly, evil instincts and behaviors that led him to be one of the most depraved Governors of the country - how many death sentences did he set aside? How many did he even pause over? How many caused him anguish, doubt, regret? His deliberate, callous inaction when given ultimate and unfettered power to grant mercy speaks volumes about his indifference or his ambition, I'm not sure which.

- that same pattern of being an essentially bad person when it counted, on the moral ledger of life, led him to disaster in Iraq.

It's not bad luck.

It's not coincidence.

A President without the ability to accept humility before it is politically expedient is virtually guaranteed to get himself into that political mess. Yes-men. Loyal party members rather than competent professionals. Ideals over results. Faith over fact. Death rather than life. War rather than peace. Power rather than process. Arrogance rather than cooperation.

Bush has not been a perfectly imperfect President. If one were to take him, for example, and systematically turn all his right actions into wrong ones, then we might call him the perfectly bad President.

As it is, he's merely the worst that there's been in years and years and years.

Let his legacy be low taxes on the rich, ballooning inequality, failure to identify broken processes that led to 9/11 and Katrina, failure to cope with those disasters once they occurred, failure to appoint and assign competent personnel, a failed attempt to destroy a wildly popular social safety net, and death. Lots and lots of death. It's on the heads of those who incited him, who encouraged him, who voted for him and who aided him, but it's on the hands of all of America.

And what now?

Well, now we take hope and take courage going forward. American citizens have an opportunity. Look into citizen diplomacy ("the right, if not the obligation of the individual citizen to be personally engaged in international relations") - don't leave it up to the experts in government. They can't do it alone, and shouldn't be allowed to even if they could. If there's a local International Visitors Council (IVC) near you, join it. Meet someone from Iraq, from Saudi Arabia, from China, from India, from France. Shake their hands, introduce yourself. Listen to what they say. Make a difference. Non-American citizens can also do their part, in the U.S. and abroad, by challenging beliefs, helping bridge gaps and educate those who don't know, and participating in exchange of all kinds. IVC also has need of you.

The best IVC, in my unhumble opinion, is the one I belong to, the IVC of Philadelphia, www.ivc.org. There are lots of them, but our program is terrific, our results are terrific, our people are terrific.

I have personally attended events and met people from every continent, and greeted them in their native languages. It makes a difference. Say hi to someone from Venezuela, from Cameroon, from Syria and Oman and Yemen and Bahrain and Kazakhstan and Canada and Spain and more. It affects you, sure. But much, much, much more importantly for the U.S. and everyone who lives here, it affects them.

Join us. Welcome them. Make a difference. As Abraham Lincoln is quoted on the front page of Philly's IVC page, "I destroy my enemies by making them my friends."

Don't let Bush be our face to the world. Be a non-ugly American. Help us atone for what he has done in our name, and for what we allowed him to do.
Posted by Eh Nonymous on Saturday April 28, 2007 at 6:55am
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