And so how have we changed?
First, in the most concrete sense, we are short some 2,500 men and women who have died in the conflict. Their loss will echo across the years in the struggling single parents, the psychically wounded children, friends, lovers and acquaintances left behind to make sense of their deaths.
There are the thousands upon thousands who have returned home without limbs, eyes, hearing and any variety of ailments that will hamper them for what remains of their lives, which we can expect to be shorter.
There is the financial cost of taking care of them and the financial cost of what could have been spent here. (For details, go here.)
By way of example, there is a giant inland body of water known as the Salton Sea, located in the desert of Southern California. A stop-off for millions of birds along the Pacific flyway, it is also a vibrant fishery. But it is dying from rising rates of selenium. It would cost $2 billion to restore – roughly three weeks of war in Iraq – but the funds are not there and an environmental disaster awaits the region.
To our democracy, the damage is immense. At the outset of the war, when millions across the country protested, the President equated their "expressing their opinions" with a healthy democracy when, prior to this ghastly affair, the measure of representative democracy was the extent to which our leaders listened to our opinions.
Lying about the causes and threats to which we were subjected, the President set American against American, chose one of the divided sides as his own to lavish positive governance upon and sent the rest straight to hell.
The schism, rent along lines dating back to a civil war we had almost forgotten, will take years to close.
Finally, the President and his minions put an end to a post-Cold War order men died in the first Iraq war to establish. Bush pére’s new world order could not outlast his own offspring. Our power is no longer omniscient, nor is it infallible. The deck will have to be reshuffled once the next crew sweeps the cards up from the floor. The new hand dealt will see a humbler, poorer country rejoining the family of nations at the table.
Perhaps the great conservative shibboleth that alliances and multilateral internationalism were for frou-frou girly men afraid to use our superior power to crush others at will may finally be put to rest, now that it has failed the test.
And that’s a positive change. A lone, positive change.
Thursday, March 16, 2006
'We Have Failed the Test'
The Highway Scribe is a blogger and journalist of 23 years. He is the author of "Vedette or Conversation with the Flamenco Shadows," which takes place during the Spanish Civil War and is available through Amazon. He has blogged his second novel, "The Sidewalk Smokers Club," at Sidewalk Smoker's Club. He blogs at highwayscribery.
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3 comments:
Indeed; but every dog eventually has his day of reckoning.
It's coming. I saw it last November when Tim Kaine from my home state won the governorship in spite of Kilgore throwing everything but the kitchen sink at him.
Keep scribing; and I'll keep howling.(~.~)
I hope you're right and look forward to reading your site (as soon as blogger fixes this morning's problems)and hats off to Kiko's House for putting together this little forum.
Highway Scribe brings up an ominously important point: Will our society be able to heal from the damage that the Bush cabal has inflicted on it?
The optimist in me wants to believe that it will.
The pessimist believes that it will take more than a new president and Congress to throw out the shortsighted policies and repeal the punitive laws. Then there's the Supreme Court . . .
Ahem.
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