John, now we're getting down to basics. This is very good.
"You were doing so well until you started going off on Obama as if it were
he who who was standing in the way of our goals."
Our goals? What are our goals? Barack Obama's policy proposals are pretty
much the same as those of Hillary Clinton. But I didn't fight against Clinton
tooth and nail over nuanced policy differences. Again and again Obama talks of a
new kind of politics. But to what end? Pundits hear Obama's words and apply the
word "transformational". What does that mean? Or as Walter Mondale famously
asked, "Where's the beef?"
Part of Obama's genius as a politician has been his saleman's skill in using
the words "hope" and "change" in a deliberately non-specific way to manipulate
people with quite different hopes and agendas for change. Fine. He's got our
attention. We're in his showroom. Now I want to see the goods. If Obama is
peddling what Clinton was peddling then what, exactly, was all that fuss
over?
"But I have never been tempted to rail about perfection when the country
is being taken over by right wing zealots. Do we have a responsibility to our
children or not?"
Yes, I am mindful about Voltaire's caution about the best being the enemy of
the good. "But let's work the problem. Let's not make the problem worse by
guessing" [Ed Harris - Apollo 13]. We agree every last vestige of Reaganism and its bastard child Bushism should be swept from power.
You'll get no argument from me on that.
But is Reaganism the underlying problem or is it a symptom of the underlying
problem? Do we have a responsibility to
our children to identify and address the underlying problem? My perspective leads me to
conclude that the underlying problem didn't originate with Ronald Reagan. Nor is
the underlying problem the inherent imperfectibility of human nature. The
underlying problem lies elsewhere and it can be addressed and solved.
Dwight D. Eisenhower was onto something fundamental with his farewell address even if it was a bit hypocritical. It is a cruel irony of history that his important but forgotten farewell address was eclipsed three days later with John F. Kennedy's frivolous but memorable inaugural address. (An uncanny foreshadowing of Obama?) The military-industrial-congressional complex Eisenhower warned us of was so abused as a whipping boy by the radicals of the 60's that Eisenhower's larger point has been lost.
Conventional wisdom has it that the United States triumphed in the Second
World War. Tom Brokaw popularized the term "The Greatest Generation" to descibe
those who fought. But Eisenhower clearly saw the darker side of that "triumph".
I am going to make the case that America's "triumph" in the Second World War set us on a path of catastrophic moral decline. To that end, indulge my use of a literary device to personify evil.
Imagine what Satan's consternation must have been like when he surveyed the
world situation in the opening decade of the twentieth century. The newly
industrialized world was peaceful and prosperous. Democracy and social reform
were spreading outwards from this base. An explosion in international trade was
binding historical enemies together. And those pesky United States of America
were poised to stride onto the center of the world stage with their really
annoying idealism and moralism. This rubbed salt in a wound, for Satan had been
nursing a grudge against America since the Civil War.
Abraham Lincoln's ill-considered boast that America was "the last, best hope
for earth" had gotten Satan's full, undivided and wrathful attention. Satan had
jealously regarded this earthly realm to be his domain ever since his
masterstroke with the fruit. But Satan didn't let his anger at Lincoln's
presumption blind him to the possibility of exploiting America's propensity
for self-righteous hubris. At the dawn of the twentieth century Satan saw his
opening to put America in its place once and for all.
This required exquisite planning on Satan's part. Satan's game is not chess
or poker. It is the solitary version of dominoes. Set them up just right on the
stage of history, give the first one a tap, and stand back. (See "Before the
Devil Knows You're Dead" for a brilliant parable on this theme.) Satan had one
of his dominoes strategically placed in a Balkan backwater called Sarajevo. When
that domino fell in 1914 it started a chain of falling dominoes of which the
Great War (so-called before we sensibly decided to index them) was only the
first. Communist Russia was another.
Long story short, the First World War led inexorably to the Second World War
as Satan's dominoes fell. The trick now was to entice a stubbornly
isolationalist America into the trap. Two key strategic dominoes had been in
place in the fateful year of 1898, one domino in Cuba and another in Hawaii. The
falling of these dominoes in 1898 had almost by accident given America
a colonial presence in the Pacific. America's "accidental" presence in the
Pacific put her on a collision course with Imperial Japan. Satan's domino at
Pearl Harbor was waiting.
[Of course, in Satan's schemes there are no accidents. An idealistic country
deeply hostile to overt colonialism had been tempted in the name of idealism to
acquire colonies. See how Satan works? Use a nation's self-righteous hubris to
tempt it into betraying its most precious ideals. Apply this tactic as often as
necessary. Count on the nation's self-righteous hubris to blind it to your
repeated temptations. Patiently wait for the nation's precious ideals to wither
and die. History of America? You tell me. Destiny of America? We'll see soon
enough.]
So what can be said of the Second World War? It opened up the gates of Hell
here on earth. That precious idealism of America and her allies was tested. So
how well did we do? Let's just touch on the highlights. Hamburg, 45,000 innocent
civilians killed, Dresden, 35,000 innocent civilians killed, Tokyo, 120,000
innocent civilians killed, Hiroshima, 140,000 innocent civilians killed,
Nagasaki, 80,000 innocent civilians killed.
In fairness, these numbers sum to about half a million lives which is only 1%
of the estimated total killed in the Second World War. Moreover, the sacrifice
of half a million lives saved millions more by shortening the war. Do you notice that Satan is
smiling? This is exactly what he has been waiting so patiently to hear. It's
the sound of precious ideals being ground into dust by the millstone of
rationalization. It is the sound of America's Second World War "triumph" being
ground into dust by the millstone of self-delusion.
Saint Augustine thought deeply about the dilemma and the challenge that
warfare posed for Christians. The dilemma is simple. Be damned if you do wage
war. Be killed or enslaved if you don't. The challenge for Christians is that a
"turn the other cheek" moral philosophy only allows for the "be killed or
enslaved" option. Not to put too fine a point on it, but that is the option that
Jesus ultimately chose after agonizing over the decision in Gethsemane. If the
decision was agonizing for Jesus, it should be no less agonizing for those who
call themselves Christians.
Augustine attempted to square this circle with a solution that makes passing
camels through the eyes of needles seem easy by comparison. Take up the sword
only if you must, he said, and with the knowledge that you risk damnation if you
strike your enemy for any motive other than love. Yeah, right. Now that's an
impossibly high standard for anybody not a saint. But the thing about impossibly
high standards is that they aren't meant just for saints.
Augustine's impossibly high standard should tell us something about the
nature of war. The idea that there can be "triumph" in war is a morally wrong
delusion. "Triumph" in war is a moral oxymoron. Taking up the sword has to be an
admission of a moral failure to meet Augustine's impossibly high standard. Now,
there is a nuance to this. We cannot avoid moral failure. In my tradition,
Catholicism, this simple fact of life is formalized in the doctrine of original
sin.
So where does that leave the moral status of our warriors? This is not an
academic question for me as my son serves in the military. The answer is not
comforting. We ask those who fight for us to put themselves at physical risk to
be sure. But from a Christian perspective, that's not the worst of it. We ask
those who fight for us to put themselves at the very gravest moral risk. There
is no Christian doctrine I know of that supports the Nuremburg defense.
Until shortly after the Second World War, the Department of Defense was
called the Department of War. If I had to assign a date to the beginning
of America's catastrophic moral decline it wouldn't be 1945 August 6. No, it
would be 1947 September 18 for it was on that date that we formally changed the
name of the Department of War. Assigning to the word "war" the euphemism of
"defense" was a morally catastrophic mistake. Another of Satan's strategically
placed dominoes fell on that September day.
Think carefully about what happened on 1947 September 18. War is the very
worst of bad things humans can be tempted into. But defense? Defense of our
loved ones? Defense of innocent civilians? Isn't the defense of innocent
civilians morally right, even morally imperative? Hold that thought for a
moment.
Hamburg, 45,000 innocent civilians killed, Dresden, 35,000 innocent civilians
killed, Tokyo, 120,000 innocent civilians killed, Hiroshima, 140,000 innocent
civilians killed, Nagasaki, 80,000 innocent civilians killed. Are you still
holding that thought about the moral imperative to defend innocent
civilians? Yes? Well, now you know the meaning of cognitative dissonance. Or the
meaning of hypocrisy. On moral issues they are the same thing.
On 1947 September 18 America changed war into defense. On that September day
the very worst of bad things humans can be tempted into was changed into a
morally righteous imperative. It is said that revenge is a dish best served
cold. Satan let his revenge on Lincoln and Lincoln's "last, best hope for earth"
cool for 82 years before it was served. And, Satan's greatest triumph, America
didn't even notice what had happened on 1947 September 18.
By a strange coincidence, or maybe not, George Orwell was writing "1984" at
the time. Orwell's fictional Oceania aslo had a Department of Defense. Orwell
called it the Ministry of Peace. Around the same time, General Curtis LeMay,
formerly in charge of reducing Japanese cities to heaps of ash, was organizing
the Strategic Air Command. LeMay built SAC into an instrument capable of
reducing Russian cities to heaps of ash. Not lacking a dark sense of humor,
LeMay gave SAC the motto "Peace is Our Profession".
So not only do we ask those who fight for us to put themselves at the very
gravest moral risk, but we also do everything we can to disguise that moral
risk. We use all of the elements of denial, delusion, distraction and deception
to convince our warriors that taking up the sword is something other than what
it is, an admission of our moral weakness and failure.
Note that I am not passing judgment on our warriors. I am not a pacifist. I
hope that I am not a hypocrite. In rejecting pacifism, I am admitting to my own
cowardice, my own moral weakness and failure. In the Garden of Gethsemane, I
would have chosen differently from Jesus. The dilemma and the challenge that
warfare poses for Christians is the very worst dilemma and the very stiffest
challenge Christians face.
Reluctantly rejecting pacifism is one thing. Embracing and glorifying
militarism is another thing. Jimmy Carter famously admitted to committing
adultery in his heart by lusting after women. I don't recall Carter ever
admitting to engaging in orgies. If we as a nation chose to make the moral
compromise and reject pacifism, we owe it to ourselves, and more importantly to
our warriors, to reject the denial, delusion, distraction and self-deception
that disguises the moral weakness and failure implicit in our choice. We have to
admit that, in rejecting pacifism, we are flirting with Satan and putting
ourselves and our warriors at enormous moral risk by doing so.
By embracing and glorifying militarism, and by wrapping it in the cloak of a
moral imperative to defend the innocent, America now stands at the very
threshold of the gates of Hell. We are way beyond flirting with Satan. First
date, the Second World War, a war against evil. Second date, the Vietnam War, a
war over ideology. Third date, the Iraq War, a war over oil. I detect a
disturbing trend here about what it takes to motivate America to go to war.
Hillary Clinton recently talked about being provoked into obliterating Iran.
We have no idea where or when the next of Satan's strategically placed dominoes will fall and tempt us into igniting a nuclear Third World War. To repeat,
America now stands at the very threshold of the gates of Hell.
So is there another political issue you would like to raise, John, that
better merits my full and undivided attention? I am sympathetic to your point of
view that getting the current batch of warmongers out of office is our top
prioity. But the underlying problem is nonpartisan. Democrats Roosevelt, Truman,
Kennedy, and Johnson were deeply complicit in creating America's hellish
addiction to militarism. Democrats Carter and Clinton were mostly content to let
it fester. Even if Obama gets us out of the Iraq quagmire, that only returns us
to the Carter/Clinton status quo ante.
That's just not good enough for me. It's certainly not good enough for
my son who is literally in harms way. It's not good enough for every other
warrior we put at moral risk when we ask them to take up the sword. So yes, I'll
continue to support Barack Obama's candidacy but not unconditionally. Obama says
he'll get us out of Iraq. That's great. I'm glad to hear it. It's a good start.
But Obama will still be Commander in Chief after we leave Iraq and I haven't
heard Obama say anything about America's self-destructive addiction to
militarism.